Glen Hirshberg Roll, Dark[A behind-the-scenes peek at the Rolling Darkness Revue]

At the very first performance of the Rolling Darkness Revue — Dark Delicacies bookshop, Burbank, California, October of 2004 —a thoroughly competent former student of mine showed up with a digital camera and a cinematography-minded companion from USC film school. A year later, at the kick-off event for the 2005 tour-Mystery and Imagination Bookshop, Glendale, Ca. — a correspondent for National Public Radio arrived with microphone gear and snazzy digital deck. In between and afterward, at more than half of our shows, there've been other cameras, cassette recorders, even one guy with a mini-disc.

And yet.

Two years into its existence, barely a frame of film or thread of tape or byte of digital whatever exists to prove that the Rolling Darkness Revue was ever there. In 2004, my former student called me a week after our debut, baffled and embarrassed, to say that all she'd shot were shadows. Our radio correspondent (the dedicated and extraordinarily helpful Rick Kleffel, about whom more later) realized only after the 2005 launch event that he'd somehow arrived with the wrong mic, and gotten only murmurs that couldn't quite be clarified enough for NPR.

It seems that capturing the Rolling Dark in action is a little like recording EVP (that's Electronic Voice Phenomena, as in the floating, disembodied voices of the dead). There are those who swear they've heard it. A few who can claim they saw it. For the rest of you, it's going to have to come down to faith.

At least until we can sucker some unsuspecting shop in your town into letting us roll through…


Creation Myth

Dennis Etchison, indisputably one of the Rolling Dark's co-founders and its eminence grise based on bristly Hemingway beard alone (never mind the multiple World Fantasy Awards, British Fantasy Awards, decades of stunning stories, blah blah, yeah yeah), still thinks this was his idea. He bases this claim, as far as I can tell, on two occurrences.

First, he refers repeatedly to a 1997 event at the Jazz Bakery in Los Angeles, California, at which he and the great Ramsey Campbell regaled a justifiably rapt club audience for more than two hours with recitations of four of their best-loved stories. There is no denying the existence of this event; unlike the Rolling Darkness Revue shows, there are tapes to prove it, and I'm the proud owner of a set.

Second, he reminds me of a conversation he and I had the second time we met, reading in a sort of line-up at Mystery and Imagination in Glendale at their annual Saturday-before-Hal-loween extravaganza. We were talking, he reminds me, about how oral storytelling played a crucial role in luring both of us into the field. We talked about favorite readers, about Ramsey Campbell huffing up like a cartoon dragon and breathing terror in slow, scorching bursts from the armchairs he prefers onstage. We also talked about wrestling, which has nothing to do with the Rolling Dark, but if you talk to Dennis for more than a minute or two, you're going to talk wrestling.

Somewhere in there, Dennis claims, he told me we should set something up. A touring cavalcade. A company of terror-players traipsing the countryside, pulling up in local bookshops or better still, little clubs and theaters, telling tales with low-key theatrical and musical accompaniment, slipping out of town again, doing the Halloween season right.

Maybe he's correct. I remember it a little differently, and in a different order. And I have no idea who broached it first. Maybe not me, because what had I done, to that point in my career, to make me think Dennis (or Ramsey, with whom I'm certain I'd had a similar conversation at the World Horror Convention the previous spring) would want to come traipsing in my wagon?

Doesn't matter. What matters is this: For Dennis, it was old-time radio. For Ramsey, it was films, I believe, at the very first. For me, it was Perry Berkeley (I think that was his name). He was my counselor at Camp Wil-loway (I think that was the camp), and one night, when I was eight years old, he told our cabin the story of the Tent Monster, which scared me so badly that I fled into the dark weeping, and ignited my feverish little brain so ferociously that I woke Perry in the middle of the night and made him tell me the story again.

At the opening of the original John Carpenter version of "The Fog" John Houseman, in the role of Mr. Machen (wink-wink nudgs-nudge) claps a pocket-watch shut, stares around him at the firelit faces of a group of mesmerized kids, and says, "11:55. Almost midnight. Time enough for one more story. Just to keep us waaarm."

I can't tell you exactly the moment when the Rolling Darkness Revue was born. But every single person who has performed with us has longed, at some point in their lives (or, in my case, most of my life), to be that guy. The one with the watch in his hands and that look on his face as he or she settles in to tell the last story before twelve…


Enter Pinhead

Cheap joke, it's true, although he did write not one, not two, but three of the Hellraiser movies based around that Clive Barker character, and he has worn his hair in bristles ever since I've known him. But the truth is that whoever thought up the Rolling Darkness Revue, Peter Atkins' entrance on the scene went a long way toward ensuring its eventual existence.

A longtime friend of Dennis' and well-liked companion of pretty much everyone who has written a word of horror in the past twenty years, as far as I can tell, Pete brought some essential qualities to what had somehow become a planning committee. Urbane and relaxed, he proved equally at home chatting about glam rock with Dennis, about crazed American noir author Harry Stephen Keeler with both of us, and about actual tour details with me. He has a winning, understated Liverpudlian accent that had me imagining scores of helpless American listeners leaning eagerly forward for his tales (even Dennis practically curls up in his lap). And he has a crucial knack for phrases like, "Uh, fellas, we're now one month from showtime, and I still feel like I'm about to stand up in school with my trousers at my ankles."

Plus, like me, he plays music. Or, as both of us would say, plays at music. He has a band — quite rockin', very fine — called Invisible Cinema, appropriately enough. (My own band is called Momzer, and if you want to know what that means, ask a Yid-dishe friend, but make sure you're not calling your Yiddishe friend that.) Gradually, almost miraculously, an actual performance concept began to cohere out of our collective, perpetual writers' fogs…

Punk Rock

I found the voice-alteration unit in a closet in the band room at the high school where I teach. The fact that its accompanying power supply adapter had a frayed connecting wire and cracked back cover that melted a little more every time electricity surged through it just gave the whole thing that appropriate patina of risk.

After several hours of jamming, Pete and I discovered a chord on which we could both improvise for thirty or even sixty minutes (it was D). Two hours into our lone officially scheduled run-through, Dennis looked up from WWWhatever-letter-goes-here on the WB long enough to announce that he had a passage from his book, The Death Artist, that would make an ideal introduction to a night of storytelling, particularly if delivered through the voice-alteration box, which, incidentally, he would not be plugging in, that was up to us young'uns.

I bought a cheap fog machine and experimented in the living room and made my two small children happier than they've been since the last time our cat jumped on my head while I was sleeping.

Somehow — dreaming big dreams of a new horror era, in which dozens of Rolling Dark-inspired caravans left home and crisscrossed the nation, bringing the art of scaring people silly back into the intimate, face-to-fog-machine venues where it has always belonged, and still with that metaphorical trousers-about-ankles feeling — we arrived at opening night. October 16th, 2004…

The Grand Opening, or, Where's Dennis?

It was a rare error in judgment from Mr. Atkins.

Alternately inspiring and panicking each other, we'd gotten to Dark Delicacies a good five hours before showtime. We'd tested the fog (still foggy), mic-checked the voice-alteration box (still sparking and lethal), even tuned our instruments. Best of all, Pete had swung across town and picked up Dennis and chauffeured him to the store, just to insure that the ceaselessly inquisitive Etchison brain didn't leap off down some wrestler-haunted corridor.

And so it was, overconfident and fog-soaked and food-deprived, that Pete somehow agreed to let Dennis take the car and go get his good pal George Clayton Johnson.

Terrific writer, Mr. Johnson. Author of "Logan's Run," Twilight Zone episodes, lots more. Wise conversationalist, too (get him going on Robert Louis Stevenson's efficiency sometime; most productive eighty seconds I've had on the craft of writing in twenty years). A snappy addition to any audience in his straw hat that so nicely accentuates his wise, white beard. Bound by few time constraints, however, and unlikely to constrain Dennis.

Our start time approached. Actual human beings turned up, some of whom we didn't even know. 15, maybe 25 people, a hefty turnout for an experimental reading event. Student, with cameraman. No Dennis. Pete stepped outside to smoke and stare hopefully down Burbank Boulevard across the San Fernando Valley. I sat and played with the power supply to the voice-alteration box.

I don't even remember the moment Dennis actually reappeared, or where he came from. Suddenly, there was his voice, dropped four octaves by the box, intoning, "You do not have to find him. He has already found you." I flicked on my keyboard, glanced toward Pete, who'd also scurried into place at his guitar. I stepped on the fog pedal, blasting poor George Clayton Johnson, who just stood in the onslaught, not even blinking, a bearded, straw-hatted cypress who'd be there, blissfully watching, decades after we'd gone.

I read "Mr. Dark's Carnival," the story I'd originally invented to tell my students on Halloween years before and that had somehow, miraculously, established me as a writer at long last. Pete read a creepy section from his novel, Big Thunder. Dennis read "The Dog Park," the same biting, hilarious, quietly vicious story he'd employed on that seminal 1997 evening with Ramsey Campbell. The fog billowed, the music stayed on D, someone took George home. Somehow, we were launched.

Snapshots, 2004

At what point did we realize that what we were doing meant something, at least to the three of us? I think it was on the second day of that first tour, at a Denny's in Santa Cruz in the pouring rain.

We'd meant to drive together — that was part of the allure. But we didn't. Long story, Pete with a movie conflict, Dennis wrestling with deadlines, etc. I drove alone, stopped midday in the misting wet at Pacheco Park and walked up an empty, grassy hillside toward a lone, twisted tree and marveled for the thousandth time at the variety of California, got lost somewhere on the transition to the 1, and wound up parked right next to my companions, who'd pulled into the Denny's lot moments before.

Pete and Dennis weren't hungry— they'd stopped at Harris Ranch, where the cows really may be slaughtered out back when your steaks are ordered — and I was cold and exhausted. And yet we were at that Denny's for hours and hours, talking Harry Stephen Keeler and Kenneth Patchen, Roxy Music and doo-wop, novel-writing vs. story-writing, wrestling. Gentleman Pete went outside for a smoke and came back with the life story of the prostitute huddled under the awning to stay out of the downpour. Dennis went out for a smoke and disappeared by himself God-knows-where and came back.

The next morning, we did an interview with Rick Kleffel, insightful critic, publisher/editor of The Agony Column website, co-host of a fine book program on the local public radio station. Under Kleffel's gentle, enthusiastic questioning, our collective enthusiasm spilled out. None of us even had new stuff to plug at the moment, we pointed out; we weren't in this for the money (never mind the box of T-shirts in the trunk, the piles of books and CDs and memorabilia we'd lugged hopefully north with us). We dismissed the notion that the purpose of horror literature was catharsis, and then, one by one, reinforced it. We carefully positioned ourselves as between genres — classic horror? Mainstream literary? Something else? — then reaffirmed our loyalty to the field. Dennis told a story about Stephen King roaming the halls of a 1970s World Fantasy Convention in a computer-geek T-shirt and boxer shorts. Afterwards, none of us could remember quite what we'd said. But we were pretty certain we'd meant every word.

Dark Carnival, Berkeley, CA

10/20/04

A late arrival — the accomplished, laughing, frighteningly bright woman who, as a girl some thirty years before, had provided the inspiration for the desperate and possibly psychotic Theresa Daughrety character in my novel, The Snowman's Children — saved us from the ignominy of an event with more performers than attendees. We left the shop happy, anyway, because the friendly Dark Carnival people had made us these really nifty magnets and bookmarks with our book covers and the event dates on them.

Evidence. Maybe we'd been there after all.

Borderlands, San Francisco,

10/21/04

Many more people, startlingly enthusiastic crowd, fog machine seemingly kicking up extra-thick mist in response and nearly choking the extraordinarily knowledgeable and helpful staff. Good thing, too, since we basically had to park in Oakland and walk the amps and equipment miles down Market Street, waving that mutant power supply-cord before us like a cobra on a leash.

Mysterious Galaxy, San Diego, 10/22/04, or, Where's Dennis II?

Actually, where are Dennis and Pete, since somehow our gypsy caravan got itself separated in the Orange Crush freeway strangle, and I arrived at the shop a good ninety minutes before my colleagues. We left the fog machine in the car, did the show dry. A woman came whom I'd taught at a Writer's Conference two years before. The fact that she even remembered who I was gave me that gorgeous, surprising making-at-least-a-little-dif-ference feeling I only really get from the teaching part of my writing life.

Rolling Dark 1 1/2, or, Someone Wake Those People Up

and Tell Them We're Done…

Hilton Hotel and Convention Center, Burbank, CA June, 2005

When the people running the 2005 Horror Writers of America convention called and asked if we'd like to do an encore of our Rolling Darkness Revue performance as the featured Friday night entertainment, we got a little proud, I think. Or maybe just overenthusiastic.

We knew we'd loved the previous fall enough to do another round, despite the fact that we'd raked in almost enough money on T-shirt sales to cover gas expenses between Santa Cruz and Berkeley. So we looked at this rare summer opportunity as a chance to reprise what had worked and try out some new elements.

We thought we'd include (ready for the impressive biz lingo?) inster-stitials: zippy, brief extracts from our works as transitions between full-length readings. Plus a backing musician this time, the multi-talented Rex Flowers. Plus a longer intro, to take better advantage of the voice box. Plus a bang-bang flurry of terrifying excerpts for the grand finale.

The part that wasn't our fault was that the convention planners — trying, in all good faith, to give us a showcase slot — scheduled us against no other programming, for right after the Friday night social with the open bar, around 10:15 or so. We actually went on around 11, once we found Dennis, who'd located a whole quadrant of the HWA to chat WWF with. The voice-alteration box finally exploded. The fog machine malfunctioned. The show can't possibly have been as interminable as I remember. It definitely was not light out when we got done. But if the boundlessly peppy Nancy Holder, self-professed author of 78 novels, tells you afterward that she "whoo, got a little snoozy," well…

We went home chastened. Determined. And buoyed by some convention notices — from someone who'd apparently dreamed a better performance than we gave — suggesting that we really were on to something.

Darkness Rising; Exit Dennis

We had better plans for Rolling Dark 2, starting with the name — Darkness Rising — which was all Dennis'. This time, we were going to write original stories, with a traveling theme. We were going to enlist different backing musicians — real musicians, who could play multiple chords — at each new gig, giving the whole thing that improvisatory feel we very much wanted. We got the ever-industrious Paul Miller, publisher of Earthling Publications, to agree to print chapbooks featuring the new stories. Three weeks from opening day of year two, Dennis quit.

It's tempting, here — it's what any self-respecting wrestling fan would do, surely — to construct some mythology at this point. Some Shani Davis-Chad Hedrick meltdown, ending with Dennis slamming Pete and Glen's heads together, leaping atop a table in triumph, and fleeing down the 405. The truth has much more to do with the endless, tedious, frequently terrifying mechanics of trying to make a living as a writer. Dennis had deadlines. Work he had to get done, that he was actually sure was going to pay him. The dates didn't work.

Traveling and reading with Dennis has been and will remain a profound privilege, and I very much hope to have the chance to do it again. Once Pete and I got over the disappointment, we started calling around. We realized quickly that there were more than a few writers who'd either heard about what we were doing already, or who liked the idea once we told them. Within days, we had a whole host of new talent lined up, each for separate gigs, so that every single night really would be a unique and unrepeatable event. The 2005 Darkness Rising tour wound up featuring readings by Robert Masello, Nancy Holder, Tamara Thorne, Robert Morrish, and Michael Blumlein, along with Pete and me.

Another student of mine, Kat Hartson, painted an eerie, gigantic backdrop of a street corner, a single street lamp, a shadowy figure in a hat. We nailed a couple cans to a board and created stage-headlights, came up with a frame story about a broken-down car, a nervous driver waiting in a dead neighborhood and telling himself stories while hoping for someone to come. We bought hats, and my wife told me I looked "weirdly almost sexy" for the first time in a while. We got a better fog machine, a bag of fall leaves, and left the voice-alteration box home.

The Dark would roll once more.

Snapshots, 2005

God, the music, first of all. Rex Flowers and Jonas Yip, my longtime friends and bandmates/droning dreamily and hypnotically in Glendale, at the first show in which the Rolling Dark actually had to turn people away. Prog-rock pounders Pegasus all but blowing us offstage but stirring a responsive crowd in a tent outside Lou's Records in San Diego. Amar Chaudry's playful stylings at the wonderfully welcoming Capitola Book Cafe near Santa Cruz. The amazing Mr. Kleffel's eerie vocal & electronics ensemble, Pets Gone Wild (featuring his longtime companions Dana Massie and Jinny Royer), amping up the ambience as we kicked off the Dusk-til-Dawn Fest at Borderlands.

The sights, too: the old guy at Mystery and Imagination who got an accidental, full-face blast of the new fog, nearly passed out, and stayed anyway. Robert Morrish and his unannounced, full-cast, old-time radio-style blitz through his story, "Junkyard of the Damned" at the Capitola Book Cafe. Michael Blumlein showing up in mask-to-boots fetish costume and alarming even the jaded Market Street denizens for his inspired reading of "Greedy for Kisses" at Borderlands. The highlight of that night, we thought, at least until store owner Alan Beatts took the mic, thanked us, then put the entire RDR to shame with a dazzlingly dry, funny, and devastating reading of the best Richard Laymon story I've ever encountered.

On the way through the mountains to Santa Cruz, my parents called on my cell phone to report that my grandmother had died. This was not unexpected. She was 94, cancer-riddled, under hospice care. She'd been sedated into deep sleep because of encroaching panic, and I'd said my goodbyes before we left. Pete sat quietly, said nothing when I pulled off once more into Pacheco Park. He lurked near the park entrance while I walked up the grassy hill to the lone tree once more. I'm pretty sure I'll stop there every year, now. Then I went back, thanked Pete for his intuitive quiet, and we rolled on into Santa Cruz.

In wondrous and surprising and uncomfortable and inspiring ways, the Rolling Darkness Revue had officially gotten away from us. It's itself, now, I think. It's coming anywhere that will have it this October. What will happen once it gets there is anyone's guess.

11:55

Best thing about being the one to write this article, of course, is that I get to be the guy with the watch. With the one more story.

A couple years ago, at the ConDor Conference in San Diego, I wound up on a panel with noted science fiction author David Brin. Mr. Brin was nothing if not provocative, issuing pronouncements — some of them genuinely thoughtful — about pretty much anything anyone in the room cared to talk about. When he realized he was on the panel with a couple of ghost story writers, he proceeded cheerfully to dismiss pretty much the entire field. Science fiction writers were forward-thinking, essentially optimistic, rooted in the real. Horror writers, he claimed, were romantic pessimists, in love with and mired in a peculiar nostalgia for a time when there was more we did not know.

To me, there are few human actions more forward-thinking, optimistic, and profoundly rooted in authentic human experience than staring down the inevitable end and transforming it into story. It's true, I don't remember a whole lot about the performances immediately following my grandmother's death. But I will forever weave the last moments I shared with her in this world into the story of the Rising Rolling Dark, and I will always be happy to visit her there.

Years ago, I took my folklorist-wife to the National Storytelling Festival in Jonesboro, Tennessee. Nostalgia everywhere that weekend, no question about it. Stories a little squeaky-clean and bloodless as a lot, for me. Except for Saturday night — by far the best-attended night of the entire event — when what seemed the entire population of the eastern half of the state gathered on the riverbanks to hear ghost stories told from the pavilion. There was something so joyful, at once fundamentally universal and supremely solitary in that experience, and it only became more joyful as the moon got higher and the chill more ferocious and the stories darker.

As long as we can continue to pull it off — as long as the dates line up, and the economics at least provide the illusion of working out, and the musicians and painters and guest stars keep popping up and contributing their fabulous ideas, and the listeners keep coming — Pete and I have pretty much committed ourselves, now. This year, maybe we'll have the privilege of bringing the river to you.

(Want to book us? Get in touch through Glen's website at www.glen-hirshberg.com)

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