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Don't Laugh, Sweetie
by Don Drewniak

From 1978 to 1999, I had the good fortune of being the director of the Central Mass Striders’ running club men’s open team. The team’s first race was at the 1978 eight-man team Plymouth to Provincetown Eighty-Mile Relay. We finished third.

The team placed first for nine consecutive years from 1979–1987 and second in 1988 when a Nike sponsored pick-up team caught and passed our lead runner in the middle of the final leg.

That was the final Plymouth Rock to Provincetown Relay. The chief of police of one of the towns on the route refused permission to continue the race citing that the large numbers of teams (over two hundred) had become a threat to public safety.

It was either in 1984 or 1985 that the race was held on the same October weekend as the Fantasia Fair that was attended by transvestites from near and far. I, along with another runner (Ralph), stopped by the Provincetown Inn early in the evening to pick up the team trophy and first-place medals for the eight members of our winning team.

We had a total of eighteen men’s and women’s teams that competed in the race. I ran the seventh leg (fourteen miles) for one of the CMS age 40–49 teams.

I had previously decided to skip the awards ceremony at the hotel and instead have dinner with my wife, Dolores, and anywhere from fifteen to twenty couples and individuals associated with CMS at The Mews Restaurant and Cafe in Provincetown.

Driving from the inn to the restaurant, I spotted a tall woman (or so I thought) dressed in a long black dress, arm-length white gloves and spiked high heels. Topping all this was long, flowing blonde hair.

“Look at the size of that woman!” I blurted out.

“Look again,” countered Ralph, “that’s a guy.”

So it was.

After parkig the car, Ralph and I found ourselves walking behind Blondie as he/she entered The Mews. The restaurant was divided into two sections by a three-to-four foot wooden partition that ran down the middle of the interior. Seated to the left were our CMS runners and family members. To the right? You guessed it, Fantasia Fair attendees. All were men dressed as women. They were dressed to the hilt (to use an expression from decades long-since past). It was quite the sight.

I should point out to any “youngsters” reading this tale that scenes such as occurred at The Mews were rare back in the 1980s and were considered by most living in the United States to be abhorrent behavior.

As luck would have it, I sat next to my wife, Dolores, with the separating partition directly behind me. A club member (we will call him Jeff), who ran on the same team as I did, was seated directly opposite me. During the course of the evening he consumed a beer or two more than he should have. The result? He made more than a few rather loud derogatory comments about the Fantasia patrons.

Jeff wasn’t alone in making comments. Many of these were loud enough to be heard throughout the room, and most evoked laughter from our side of the restaurant. Times were far different in the 80s than they are today.

The Fantasia ladies (at least for that night) began to leave en masse close to eight that evening. Our section dropped into total silence with everyone looking beyond me. Meanwhile, I noticed that Jeff picked up a fork and held it face high in front of him.

I took a glance behind me. There was Blondie leaning slightly over the partition with two others standing on either side of him. He was an inch or two over six feet in height (6'4'’ or so with the high heels) and probably weighed about 190. Bright red lipstick, and who knows what other stuff graced his face. It failed to erase his masculine features. Blondie’s breasts, or whatever they might have been, were quite pronounced.

Staring directly at Jeff, Blondie said in a loud falsetto voice, “Don’t laugh, Sweetie, I have a wife at home who is a knockout.”

Not a sound other than the clicking of high heels could be heard as the three walked out of The Mews. All hell then broke loose.