Mike
Mazurki
Traffic slows for rubber-necking casualties etched in
Mazurki's face. Horns honk in salute or aggravation. Winos in MacArthur Park ripple in their sea of
newspaper beds as they dimly sense something is up . Mike suggests we
step inside. The hand muraled ceiling is a mile high. Boris Deutsch
completed it seconds before the last splash of color in the most colorful
decade of the century. Gold gates at the top of the marble staircase were
meant to open into Flapper Heaven. But things changed. The tourists take
seats in a maroon corner booth, primed by Mazurki's presence, adrenalized
by the wail of approaching sirens.This is the home of the
Cauliflower Alley Club, Mike Mazurki's version of the showcase restaurants populated by boxers and
wrestlers who hung out with movie stars and mobsters back when Mike
wrestled and hung out with movie stars and mobsters. Mike befriends the
shady characters who lurk in the dark credits of every black and white
gangster film you've ever seen. Today these faces would be created in a
special effects lab. In their day they did it with their fists. There
would be no film noir without them.