The old man on the street corner was asking for money from people who were holiday shopping. Except he wasn’t begging. He was singing songs and dancing.
There is a big difference between panhandling and entertaining.
He was dressed in a red velvet coat and Santa cap. He had skin the color of rich mahogany, and he was as lean as a Q-tip.
In his aged eyes you could tell he’d been around. But in his voice he was Ron Isley.
A few of us holiday shoppers gathered around to watch his one-man show. There we were, carrying large shopping bags from upscale stores, dressed in our nice suburban clothes, drinking designer coffees in eco-friendly paper cups.
And this man had holes in his shoes.
But it was hard not to smile while watching him spin around, dancing like the Godfather of Soul, singing Christmas carols at the top of his voice to people on the street.
He also had a knack for inventing lyrics to songs for which he didn’t know the words.
The following are actual substitute lyrics he
composed, on the spot, to “Joy to the World.”
“Joy to the world,
“Joy, joy, joy,
“Joy… Joy… Joy…!”
It wasn’t exactly Gershwin, but it worked.
I stood in the back of the crowd with others and gladly tossed money into his bucket between each burst of our applause.
“This guy’s good,” said one lady.
“He really is,” said a man.
“I wish I could dance like that.”
“How is his groin still intact?”
Then the man began taking song requests. He smiled at us, and I could see that he was missing several teeth. His face was covered in white stubble, and he was out of breath from exertion. But that smile was one-hundred watt.
A young woman in the crowd said, “Do you know ‘Go Tell It On the Mountain’?”
“You better know I do,”…