David Selzer is a writer of poetry, prose fiction, screenplays and stage plays. He embraces digital platforms to share his work of more than fifty years… READ MORE


  • ‘EAST END GIRL, DANCING THE LAMBETH WALK’: BILL BRANDT

    the-lambeth-walk

    ‘East end girl, dancing the Lambeth WalkBill Brandt, 1939

     

    He’s set it up, of course. Or, rather, framed it.
    There’d be no feigning this young woman’s delight
    in being ‘free and easy’ and doing
    ‘as you darn well pleasy’. She’s got her best blouse on,
    with shoulder puffs, her sister’s shoes, which fit her now,
    black ankle socks and shoulder length, unpermed hair
    freshly washed – and waved, probably with Kirby grips.
    Doin’ the walk, she lifts the hem of her skirt,
    revealing her slip – and smiles coquettishly.

    Beside her is a line, a queue almost of
    female acolytes. (The only boy looks away).
    They’re pre-pubescent, excited, nervous at what they see:
    grown up clothes, shapely legs, unimaginable bust,
    a sensuousness that, unwilled, will be theirs.

    Down the street of terraced houses, symmetrical
    as barracks, a woman strides, her back turned
    on this miracle: a girl who knows
    she will never grow old – ‘Any ev’ning,
    any day…Doin’ the Lambeth Walk.’ Oi!

     

     

     


    4 responses to “‘EAST END GIRL, DANCING THE LAMBETH WALK’: BILL BRANDT”


    1. Lesley Johnson Avatar
      Lesley Johnson

      I love this – does the magical Bill Brandt (I know a fair bit of his stuff) proud. Plus we’ve all – male and female – been there. Years back maybe. But confident, bold, happy. Eternal?

      1. David Avatar

        Yes, eternal: a miracle – and a joke. The photographer has recruited us as witnesses. The girl knows she will live forever. The woman thinks she knows differently.

    2. Anne Wynne Avatar
      Anne Wynne

      Lambeth Walk – Loved it! It’s warm, tender and northern. I love the details of this young girl being “grown-up” Found all the details very enjoyable and it just made me smile as I was reading it. Reminded me a little of Sylvia Selzer’s screenplay, ‘So I’ll be Jane Russell then!’ – I think because of the era and setting.

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