Letter to the Editor - The Lakeville Journal - 5-28-20

‘Hi-Ho Silver and Away!’

 

That was my first introduction to a “good guy” wearing a mask — in TV westerns. It was a spiffy black mask, as I recall, that covered only the area around the eyes of the Lone Ranger’s face. I was a young kid back then (long ago) and boy that mask was cool! It also was probably  my first introduction to a rich phenomenon in human nature: mystery. Take something away (full viewing access to the eyes) and get something way cool as a result: “the look.” Back then, all of us young boys desperately wanted to copy the Lone Ranger’s “look.” (Of course it didn’t hurt that the Lone Ranger rode a spectacular completely white horse — and had a trusted, stoic Native American [Indian back then], Tonto, as a sidekick).

Up until the Lone Ranger came along, my good guy/bad guy viewing assessments had to rely on the standard “hide your face with a mask — you’re a bad guy” themes. Although the character actors always did a good job in whatever Western they were cast in, the predictability of “mask means bad guy” got a little worn. Eventually, TV and movie writers got wise to how much fun they could have with audiences by mixing up bad guys with masks and good guys with masks and, well, you get the point.

Years later, casting my net as far and wide as I could to learn new skills for use in performing, I hung around with some very talented “Commedia dell’Arte” students. This Italian form of performance utilizes masks that cover most all of the face save the mouth. Each mask was sculpted, usually in leather, to be an iconic take-off of a character in the local political/societal power structure. Needless to say, there was a great deal of comedy to be mined therein. 

(Halloween comes to mind as probably the ultimate stage for any and all the people of the world to cut loose with losing one’s present identity in favor of a fantasy-fed one with a mask. But that only lasts one day per year.)

Today is a new day, it’s a new age. We’re all in a bit of a fix. The coronavirus is made up of countless gazillions of teeny-tiny biological agents. We’re all taking the word of scientists that it exists, (none of us have seen it), in large part because we see the devastation it has wrought in so many lives. 

In point of fact, we’re all children now. We have to use our imaginations. We the people of the world have common purpose. We are called upon by scientists to meet one, all-pervasive malevolent mystery, the coronavirus, with another mystery: a mask. “Hi-Ho Silver and Away!”  

(There is someone out there who’s totally confused by all of this. He thinks he’s riding a spectacular white horse and he endlessly shouts “Hi-Ho MAGA and Away!” but he refuses to wear a mask. Some people just have no imagination.)    

Michael Moschen

Cornwall

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