Please click the
icon to follow us on Facebook.George Washington Miller was pleased
to announce that retired Colonel Teddy Roosevelt and his Rough Riders
would be accompanying the 101 Ranch Wild West Show on their forthcoming
tour to Mexico City.
The programme of events had originally featured steer-wrestling in which
the cow-boy bit the beast's nose and upper lip before pinning it to the
ground. Miller had considered adapting this wrestling for the Mexican
audience by replacing the steer with a bull, but had recently been advised
that in fact bull fighting was more of a mental than a physical contest of
wills.
That advice had come from another evergreen cow-boy, a man never short of
a crazy idea, Roosevelt himself.
"Something is missing in this harsh world" ~ TR's
Diary EntryIn fact TR had been kicking his unspurred heels for the
most of the previous decade and was bored to distraction. He proposed a
thrilling show featuring his "Rough Riders", the name bestowed on the 1st
United States Volunteer Cavalry, one of three such regiments raised in
1898 for the Spanish-American War and the only one of the three to see
action. TR sold Miller on a feature that would eclipse the
other
Wild West Show which was even now running another swash-buckling adventure
writ large in the American psyche, the Little Big Horn featuring the
ageing George Armstrong Custer. The letter ommitted to mention a small
factual point (never a strength of TR's), that the Rough Riders had not
been provisioned with horses, and in no sense could be described either as
cavalry, or even riders.
"How Can You Mend A Broken Heart? How can a loser
ever win?" ~ Al GreenA few months later, Miller desperately wished
that he had stuck with the original nonsense. His neighbor Major Gordon W.
Lillie, who performed as Pawnee Bill, proudly declaring "Alturas de San
Juan!" introducing a stage managed and highly fictionalised version of
Roosevelt's horsed men racing up San Juan Hill to sweep all before them.
The problem with this cow-boys and indians farce was of course that the
mostly Hispanic audience was simply horrified by the scenes they were
witnessing. Which was not to say that the occasion was a disaster, because
the audience's reaction shocked Roosevelt out of his despair and presented
him with a fresh opportunity to turn his own life around.
A sickly child, he had enjoyed a brief moment of glory in Cuba before
returning to an unhappy and unfulfilling existence in the States. The
cause of that sorrow was the death of his first wife Alice and since his
remarriage, his troubled relationship with their child of the same name,
whose birth had led to the tragedy. During her formative years he had
failed to communicate effectively and also managed to project his
frustration and sense of loss upon her. Outwardly larger than life, he
flashed his winning smile at all but his daughter who inevitably developed
her own sense of resentment.
Quitting Mexico City, a wiser TR set his eyes upon a new and infinitely
more difficult challenge that would be fought on a battleground in which
few men truly emerge as victors. He would put aside foolish nonsense and
embark on a mission to be a hero once again in the eyes of his first
child.
Click
to listen to Al Green singing How Can You Mend A Broken Heart.