but somehow, I’d never seen this until today.
_______________________________________
Chris Miller’s Animal House
Copyright 1989 Information Access Company, a Thomson Corporation Company
Copyright 1989 Playboy
Playboy October, 1989
SECTION: Vol. 36 ; No. 10 ; Pg. 104; ISSN: 0032-1478
HEADLINE: Return to Animal House; writer of film revisits his old fraternity
house
BYLINE: Miller, Chris
BODY: The man who wrote the movie revisits the scene of the crime-and finds he
can still boot with the best of them.
Playboy, October, 1989
IT’s MAGIC MONDAY at the Alpha Delta house and the brothers have been drinking
since SiX A.M. They have worked their
way through Sunrise-Service Hour (tequila sunrises), Cartoon Hour (Kool-Aid
punch) and Lonely-Guy Hour (Thunderbird and
Mad Dog, straight from the bottle). Now it’s ten o’clock, and that means it’s .
. . Naked-inthe-Tube-Room Hour!
Seventy naked guys cram into the TV room, which is about as large as a small
one-car garage. Beers are distributed by dick
size-those with big ones get king cans of Bud; those with small cocks drink
from shot glasses. The worst, most repellent,
vile and disgusting porno tape available is popped into the VCR. The brother
keep checking one another out-anyone who gets a
hard-on faces rigorous punishment. No one’s quite sure what !he punishment
might be, since in the history of Magic Monday,
no one has yet gotten a hard-on during Naked-inthe-Tube-Room Hour, but they
keep checking anyway, just in case.
There’s a knock on the door. It’s the delivery guy from the pizza place-he
steps inside and freezes. Good Lord, what has he
walked in on here-a bunch of preverts or something? Oddly enough, despite the
large number of guys present, no one has the
money to pay for the pizza-because no one has any pockets. On the screen, the
cast is urinating on one another, sodomizing
dead animals, all sorts of neat stuff. “If you could wait till the end of this
sequence,” says the guy who made the order, “I’ll
run upstairs and get some money”
The pizza guy looks around, swallows and says, “Never mind. This one’s a
freebie.” He makes the quickest getaway ever
seen from a Dartmouth fraternity house.
Magic Monday is a tradition going back at least two decades at the AD house, or
Adelphian Lodge, as its members
affectionately call it. The hourly themes proliferate over the year:
Volleyball-inthe-Living-Room Hour, with Beach Boys
music and pina coladas; Ex-Athlete Hour, with Schlitz beer (because that’s what
washed-up old athletes drink); Blues Hour,
when they listen to Elmore James and drink bourbon; Christmas Hour, when they
chop down a tree, plant it in the living
room, decorate it with condoms and panties and drink eggnog; and, finally New
Year’s Hour, when they cut the tree up and
burn it, drink champagne and sing Aued Lang Syne. It’s a good time and an
important annual event.
The common belief is that the first Magic Monday occurred the day John E
Kennedy was shot. After all, is a not carved on
the pillar by the tap system in the basement, NOVEMBER 22, 1963-J.F.K.
DEAD-EIGHT KEGS? I could tell them different. You
see, I was there on November 22, 1963. First, it was a Friday, not a Monday,
and, second, what happened was less a
celebration of surreality than a wake; though, actually, it was a pretty good
time. No, the first Magic Monday occurred a
few years later, when a brother named Don chanced to stay up drinking one
Sunday night, and in the morning, the brothers
were so impressed that they blew off classes for the day and joined him. But
why muddy the underpinnings of a cherished
Adelphian tradition? Myths are more fun than facts.
Let me tell you another AD tradition: the Night of the Seven Fires. This is the
Hell Night that, in one form or another, has
marked the transition of more than a half century’s worth of AD pledges into
brothers. The early Sixties version: You had
to hike out to the snowy woods in the middle of the night and find, with the
aid of a mimeographed map, the Seven Sacred
Watch Fires. At each of these would be a complement of brothers waiting to
demand demented acts of you. You had to drop
trou and sit in the snow, consume impossible quantities of beer and wine and
vomit repeatedly, sometimes on one another.
It was one of the greatest nights of my life.
This is difficult for some people to understand. Fraternity high-jinks are a
most particular form of behavior and are
regarded with neither sympathy nor affection by much of the world, especially
mothers, police officers, campus
administrators and other societal voices of moderation and control. It’s hard
to explain to those who have missed the
fraternity experience how richly satisfying mooning or booting (thats Dart-talk
for recreational vomiting) or eating your
underwear can be. People just don’t get it.
Which is why about ten years after graduating, I decided to write a book about
fraternity life in which I would present
America with the straight skinny-the reverse value systems, the fascination
with the repugnant, the cheerful flouting of
authority The book never found a publisher, but portions of it, converted to
short stories, appeared in National Lampoon,
where their popularity prompted editor Doug Kenney to propose that he, Harold
Ramis and I write a movie based on them.
The movie was Animal House.
Now, I’m aware that a lot of people thought that Delta Tau Chi in Animal House
was somehow based on their fraternity
Sorry guys-now it can be told-the house that launched the legend was AD at
Dartmouth. And although, to the best of my
recollection, no one at Dartmouth ever put Fizzies in the swimming pool or
offed a horse in the dean’s office, someone did
once boot on the dean (and his wife), and there was, in a house today known as
the Tabard, a mermaid with goldfish-bowl
breasts, and, in the AD house, there were guys named Otter, Mounder and Pinto,
and a ‘Sex Room,” and numerous black
R&B bands that played Shout and Louie, Louie. There was also a guy named
Turnip, who placed a phone call to a dead
Smithie, identifying himself as her boyfriend. Unlike Otter in the movie, he
didn’t get himself and his fellow road-trippers
dates with her roommate and friends. In fact, that idea had never occurred to
Turnip-he’d made the call out of sheer joy of
sickness.
“Sickness Is Health, Blackness Is Truth, Drinking Is Strength.” That was the
house creed, and we tried to live up to it.
Pledges were taught power booting. if you drank enough beer and jumped up and
down a few times, it was no big deal to boot
your height-the trick was in keeping a tight stream and hitting the target, a
photo of Connie Francis, say, tacked to the
basement wall. There was a fellow who used to snooze atop the bar, naked but
for a beer cup over his dong. When a lady
would enter the basement, he would tip his cup. We built lewd snow statues, got
laid in a hearse parked out back, pledged
a
dead raccoon and once mooned the governor of New Hampshire. We had fun.
But how much fun, I wondered, were they having up at Dartmouth today? After
all, it was the Eighties now, the era of
AIDS, religious fundamentalism and the conservative backlash against the
indulgent Sixties and Seventies. What was more,
to those of us alumni who followed the news out of Dartmouth, it often seemed
as if the college had declared war on its
fraternity system.
The opening gun was firects in 1978. An English professor, James A. Epperson,
circulated a petition among the faculty to
have fraternities abolished for “interfering with college life and the health
and well-being of students.” The real stunner
came when the faculty voted 67-16 in favor of the proposal. Obviously, there
was serious resentment harbored against the
fraternities at Dartmouth.
To a degree, fraternities were under serious scrutiny nationwide. College
faculties had always tended to view them as
elitist, sexist, racist, anti-intellectual and overly involved with alcohol.
Now, in the Eighties, with their ranks swelled with
veterans of the Sixties-who by arid large hated &aternities-they were on the
attack. At many schools, especially the
smaller, private ones in the Northeast, boards of trustees formed study
committees. In 1983, Amherst and Colby abolished
fraternities outright. Gettysburg came close to doing the same, and at
Middlebury, there’s a continuing controversy over
the fate of their fratemity system. Indeed, aspects of Greek fife have been
under some form of study at approximately a
third of the 650 colleges where fraternities exist.
At the same time, though, fraternities have never been more popular. On the
rebound from their Vietnam-era doldrums,
undergraduate fraternities grew in membership from 230,000 in 1980 to more than
400,000 in 1986. This was widely
regarded as a reflection of the return to establishment values and conservatism
on campus, though it may have had more to
do with the resurgent desire of college men to raise hell and have fun with
their buddies, which, after all, is what
&aternities are all about. In any case, it seems unlikely that larger schools,
such as USC or the University of Illinois, will
ever do away with them-they’re simply too popular among both students and
alumni.
Meanwhile, back at Dartmouth, the proposal to abolish the houses was ultimately
voted down by the board of trustees, but
there did ensue a period of crackdown that resulted in many houses, being put
on probation and given shapeup-or-ship-out
ultimatums. Then, in’ 1983, came the instituting of “minimum standards” for
fraternities and sororities. Since this program
called for, among other things, expensive renovations to the deteriorating
houses, most of which had been built in the
Twenties, .it was widely perceived as an attempt to do away with the
fraternities by breaking them financially
Then, in 1987, the board of trustees released a Residential Life Statement
calling for a reduction in the fraternity system’s
dominance of social life on campus, and shortly after that, the Hanover police
conducted their notorious undercover sting
operation, deputizing an 18-year-old girl and sending her, with an out-of-town
policeman posing as her boyfriend, on a
round of fraternities during the big spring party weekend known as Green Key.
Naturally, she was served beer, and eight
fraternities and two sororities faced the possibility of criminal charges for
serving alcohol to a minor The college got them
off the hook, but it made it dear that next time, the houses would be on their
own. This had a chilling effect on the admission
of nonmember guests to parties.
Finally, in 1988, the administration announced that starting with the class of
1993, rush would be delayed until sophomore
year. Since this would decrease fraternity membership-and their already pinched
treasuries-by 25 percent, there was
bitter resistance to the measure, all the more so because it was a dictate from
on high that ignored heavy student
opposition.
After all this, you had to wonder if fraternity life at Dartmouth was any fun
at all any more. Specifically, I was curious to
see how the boys were doing at the house that had inspired Animal House. I
decided to find out.
I enter the lodge with trepidation. What am I going to find, 25 years and all
those regulatory institutions later? A skeleton
crew of intimidated weenies, sipping oolong and discussing Proust?
But no. The first thing that hits me is the smell. It’s the same smell; it
hasn’t changed in two and a half decades! Mainly
beer, with certain miscellaneous nuances. The place looks pretty much the same,
too. A bit more wre cked-up, maybe, but
it’s the same tube room, the same tap system and, running the perimeter of the
basement, the same beloved AD gutter
(today known as “the gorf”). In the erstwhile basement bathroom-converted to a
broom closet a few years back after a
brother tore out the toilet to mix a punch in it-I can still make out the
carved names of brothers from my era: Y BAGS,
LAPES, SNOT, MAG F PIE, HYDRANT, DUMP TRUCK. . . .
Having recently concluded a very successful rush, the house has nearly 100
members, and it looks as though most of them
are here tonight. They seem a little cool; I wonder if I’m welcome. Or maybe
ies just a generational style-they don’t make a
big deal of things. There are so many of them, though, more than twice the
number we had ! The living room is like a subway
car! And, God, how’d they get to be so young?
I have brought with me, ,on video cassette, an assemblage of eight-millimeter
movies taken back in my era. As I show the
old flicks-glimpses of forgotten snow statues, of the brothers cavorting on the
lawn, of parties and our great perennial R&B
band Lonnie Youngblood and the Redcoats-pledges are periodically sent to “run a
rack.” They return with lengths of plank
covered with brimming beer cups, so that the brothers may indulge their taste
for malt beverage. As the tape proceeds, the
crowd especially appreciates the sequence in which several old ADs eat the
shirt of Bert Rowley, ’61, off his back. When
the show concludes, they signify their appreciation with a round of snaps and
sing a friendly (albeit obscene) song to me.
Then one of them hands me a full 12-ounce beer cup, and I see all these faces
looking at me with expectation.
Good God, I think, can I still chug one of these things? Well, it takes a
little longer than it used to, but, yes, I can! All
rightstill got my chops! The ADs cheer, the ice is broken. We repair to the
basement, where fine music is played,
multifarious brews are demolished and laughter fills the room. Sometimes, it
occurs to me, despite the passage of much
time, the essence of things remains the same.
I stay at Dartmouth for ten days. I check out the sororities, the coed houses
and, in addition to Alpha Delta, several
“mainstream” houses. I go to parties, drink off kegs, hang out in small groups
<
br/>in &aternity rooms, doing a little herb and
getting philosophical. I find out two things.
First, fraternity life at Dartmouth is a lot more complicated than it used to
be. Parties must be registered; you have to fill
out a form at the campus police station before five P.M. on weekdays and noon
on weekends. Since a party is defined as any
time you go on tap, that means that you can no longer drink a keg without
registering with the police. Furthermore, since
the sting operation, the houses have had to post guards at all entrances to
their tap rooms during parties to check I.D.s and
make sure no underage nonmembers slip in. In addition, house presidents and
social chairmen, aware that they risk $
25,000 fines and even jail sentences if persons drunk on their beer crack up a
car, say, take great care to prevent such
drunks from departing, at least with their car keys. Meanwhile, there’s the
ongoing paranoia that Dean Wormer-like
authority figures are out to get them, that any time now, fraternity life as
they know it will be banished forever, the way
the samurai were abolished in Japan in the 1870s.
That’s a pretty tough row to hoe, compared with the relatively laissez-faire
early Sixties. But the second thing I notice is
that, despite the many modern complications, the peculiar Dartmouth genius for
having fun is undiminished. And although
much is different at the Big Green, what’s more interesting is how much has
stayed the same.
Take the AD house. We had nicknames, they have nicknames; the house currently
contains the likes of Goon, Chubber, Turd,
Hedgehog, Cowpie, Merkin, Mule, Gator and, in a nice link with the past, a new
Snot. We had a house lexicon; they have a
house lexicon, In 1962, we invested much of our neologistical energy on
descriptives for throwing up-there was “power
booting,” “spray booting,” “nose booting,” “sick booting” and the “Technicolor
yawn,” the last of these resulting from the
preboot consumption of food colorings. We also spoke of “wind tunnels” (when
your date breaks wind while your head’s up
her skirt), “reltneys” (hard-ons so big they stretch your skin until your head
flips backward) and “hooded hogs”
(uncircumcised penises). The current ADs have two great terms for an
uncircumcised penis”turtleneck” and “covered
wagon.” Also from today’s vocabulary: Dorky people are known as “lunch meats.”
Drinking is “hooking.” “Sweet!” is an
expression of approval. (“Hey, we just went on tap.” “Sweet!”) Smoking a bong
is “pulling a tube.” Doing mushroom is
“‘Shrooming.” A “chode” is a dick that’s wider than it is long. “Piling” and
“strapping” are fucking. And a “spank sock” is the
thing you keep by your bed to beat off into.
We did weird things to our pledges; they do weird things to their pledges. In
my day, as a sort of nod to AD’s past (it
started life in 1843 as a literary society), the pledges had to compose and
present papers to the brothers with titles such
as “My Sensations at Birth” and “How to Use Afterbirth in a Garden Salad.”
After one fellow-Seal-left a notebook containing
his pledge paper (“The Last Time I Sucked My Father’s Cock”) at Smith, ere it
into the hands of the dean, we got in a bit of
trouble and the practice was discontinued. And then, of course, there was boot
training and the Night of the Seven Fires.
These days, the pledge period is shorter than it used to be but correspondingly
more intense. The threatened punishment for
pledging infractions is the “Rack of Gnarl”-as many as a dozen 12-ounce cups
containing a mixture of catsup, soy sauce, dog
food, mouthwash and whatever other unappetizing liquid or semiliquid substances
happen to be on hand. You’re supposed to
drink every cup and, sorry, it’s bad form to boot too soon.
One thing you must know for this next pledging story-the ADs have always been
big on dogs. It’s still true today In the
current Alpha Delta composite, there are pictures of no fewer than four of
them, including one that’s deceased. So, OK; one
of the current pledging practices is that if the pledges can take over the
house and prevent a single brother from coming
inside for 24 hours, they don’t have to go through Hell Night. Well, a few
years ago, the pledges managed to take over the
house, throw out the brothers and actually held the place for 12 hours. The
brothers were getting worried. No pledge class
had ever pulled off what that one seemed on the way to pulling off; how would
the brothers ever live it down? Then one of
them had an idea. They grabbed one of the house dogs, taped him up, wrapped him
in a rug and hurled him through a
living-room window. That was it-the takeover was ended, the pledges had to go
through an even worse Hell Night than usual
to compensate for the inconvenience they’d caused everyone. For, you see, in
AD, the dogs are considered brothers.
There are some interesting hazing stunts at other houses, too. One &aternity
drops its pledges a few miles out of town,
naked, with an ax. The point is to get back to campus. Ever try hitchhiking
naked with an ax? The pledges of another
fraternity must participate in an event called Boot-on-Your-Brother Night. The
kicker is, you can’t change your clothes for
24 hours afterward; you have to wear them to bed, to class, to meals. . . .
A last pledging story: Some brothers in one house drove a pledge to New York
City divested him of his clothes and money
and left him there to make his way back to Hanover The pledge found a dime in
the street and called the Dartmouth Club,
where he made contact with a sympathetic alum who’d been through some of the
same shit himself The guy set the pledge up
with fine new clothes and plenty of bucks, the pledge flew back to Dartmouth,
and when the exhausted brothers finally made
their return to the fraternity, they found the pledge, resplendent in his new
duds, waiting on the front porch with a glass of
champagne for each of them.
Of course, one thing about Dartmouth that is different today is that between
then and now, the Sixties happened. And so
now, in addition to the standard types from my day-stoic jock, cool stud,
conservative zealot-you have introspective
hippies, crazed psychedelic pranksters and firebreathing radicals. You tend to
find these folks, when they join a Greek
society at all, in a couple of the coed houses, where they believe that, rather
than changing members to fit the house, you
change the house to fit the members. You also dispense with a lot of the hazing
and hierarchy-things are more communal.
You are also, by definition, nonsexist. But what I love about these folks is
that although they’re Sixties, they’re Dartmouth,
too. Each year, one of these houses holds something called a Decadent
Decathlon, which includes 12 events: Keg Throwing
for Distance, the Tap Suck, and so forth. One of the events perfectly
symbolizes the Dartmouth-Sixties fusion-the Bong
Chug. In this event, you must take a full hit from a bong, chug a beer, and
only then do you get to exhale.
There are other differences. Although there are three f
raternities and two
sororities that are predominantly black, the
mainstream houses seem genuinely unconcerned about their racial or ethnic
composition, which is a nice change from my
day. The AD house has black brothers, Hispanic brothers, Jewish brothers, even
a Moslem brother It’s not a big deal.
Also not a big deal is sex. I mean, they like it and everything, but it’s more
or less taken for granted. There were stories
about getting laid on a pool table, and in the 1902 Room at Baker Library and
even in bed, but, as I say, these were no big
deal. In the early Sixties, of course, sex was a very big deal. But that was
before coeducation and the sexual revolution.
With greater availability comes a blast attitude, I suppose. But it’s odd how
things turn around-in 1962, as far as the deans
were concerned, drinking was no big deal, but if you and your date were caught
with your pants down, you were in deep
shit. Today, they couldn’t care less what you do sexually, as long as it’s
consensual and you’re being careful about AIDS-but
drinking infractions can get you in serious trouble.
One thing that definitely has not changed is the high quality of partying at
Dartmouth fraternities. In the early Sixties,
parties were mainly free-form, though I do remember Phi Gamma’s Fiji Islands
Parties and a real good End-of-theWorld
Party during the Cuban Missile Crisis. Strange alcoholic concoctions with names
such as fogcutters, or gin and juice, or
purple Jesus punch were served, and people got even more blown out than usual.
The AD house, it was generally conceded, threw the best parties. We introduced
R&B music to campus with such luminaries
as the Flamingos, the Five Royales, Red Prysock, joey Dee and the Starliters,
the Crystals, and Little Anthony and the
Imperials. And the brothers put on behavior displays that foresaw performance
art by two decades. The moment in Animal
House when John Belushi pours mustard on himself was inspired by Seal-the
fellow whose pledge paper so amused the dean
of Smith-who at one party covered himself with yellow mustard and crawled about
on hands and knees on the dance floor,
biting dates’ asses and shouting, “I’m the Mustard Man, I’m the goddamned
Mustard Man.” Another time, Doberman or Dump
Truck or Troll or someone skied down the stairs naked, just as the band went
into Shout.
Nowadays, theme parties are the rage. One house has something called the Party
Without a Cause; everyone dresses as
James Dean and Natalie Wood. Theta Delta Chi throws a Louie Lobster Party,
wherein the guys wear lobster costumes, and
there’s a live lobster crawling around in the punch. Gods and Goddesses,
another Theta Dolt party, involves everyone
dressing as Zeus or Aphrodite-it’s basically a toga party SAE is known for its
annual Saigon Party (recently renamed
Welcome to the jungle), in which the house is filled with trees and live
monkeys. And Alpha Chi Alpha throws Beach Parties,
for which vast quantities of sand are trucked in and dumped all over the house.
The Medieval Banquet, a joint party thrown most years by the Alpha Chis and
Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority started life as a
Fifties Party, but one year the guys showed up dressed in the fashion of 1050,
and it stayed that way; the celebrants go as
wenches, serfs, knights, and so forth, sit around big tables and eat with their
hands. King Arthur and Guinevere order
people to chug and the party always turns inw a huge food fight, with tankards
of ale poured on people’s heads, roast
turkeys flying through the air and everyone soaked and ripped to the gills by
9:30.
Now, at the AD house, they’re not too big on theme parties. The more usual
thing is get a deejay, invite a bunch of people
over, order a lot of kegs and see what happens. But each spring, during Green
Key Weekend. . . .
Saturday, my last day; tomorrow it’s back to the freeways and smog and
mortgages and the diaper changings of real life.
Turns out the ADs have their major annual party this afternoon on the front
lawn. They have this terrific funk band on the
porch, wailing away, and the yard is packed with partyers. But I’m not
dancing-I’m feeling grumpy about having to go home
tomorrow and, hell, a little burned out from trying to keep up with these
20-year-olds all week.
Thanks to last nights killer rain, much of the yard is a mud puddle today.
After a while, predictably enough, the brothers
decide to do a little mud diving. In fact, half the guys in the house quickly
join in, as do many of the dates and friends and
onlookers, and suddenly, it looks like Retum of the Mud Monsters out there. And
then-uh-oh-I spot seven or eight beslimed
pledges headed straight for me with crazed, demented smiles.
Well, I don’t feel like going in any mud, that’s for sure. Later for that,
jack. I put on my most persuasive smile. “Come on,
you guys, let’s just forget it, OK?” They blithely ignore me; I barely have
time to toss my wallet and shades to my amused
wife (who has been egging them on), and then I’m being carried across the yard
by all these guys-Donk and Oddjob and Mulch
and Scurvy and Snot II and Toast and Remus and Spock-and they find a
particularly juicy mudhole . . . and plop me into it!
And-whaddaya know? -it’s great! Suddenly, I’m not tired and I’m not grumpy-it’s
as if I’ve just had a burst of adrenaline.
And, man, I’m dancing my ass off, exchanging high fives and whooping like a
maniac, and it all comes back, that total party
feeling, where time is suspended and you’re in an eternal, fun-filled now. This
is it-the thing people join fraternities for-one
of those peak bacchanalian moments that know no equal. My sense of closeness
and connection with these boogieing mud
maniacs could not be greater, and I feel more in touch with the me I like most
than I have in months.
Ah, fraternities. Sweet.
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