Copyright
2003 William D. Snyder
All
Rights Reserved
It all
began when I had been told by the people from the Farrell Lines, formerly the
American South African Lines we came
over on, that I would have to wait about a month to get a ship back to the USA.
So when Oboler offered me a job under the University of California African
Expedition headed by Wendell Phillips’ banner, I took it for just a short stay.
I wasn’t
really certain I was completely free of the Gatti-Hallicrafters contractual
influence, so Arch said, “Come with me for a couple of weeks while we find out
if you can be completely free of Gatti. I need a technician to run my tape recorders, and maybe shoot some
film. I was supposed to get these
services from the University expedition, but George Russell tells me a story
that scares me quite a bit. I’d rather
not be dependant on the expedition.”
When the
American consul and I had first met Oboler on the ship,
I told the radio playwright
the Gatti firing me story in all its
splendor. Captain Russell right away told Arch what Wendell Phillips was really
like in no uncertain terms, and ended it by saying, “If I were you, Arch, I
would not join the University of Cal expedition.
Phillips is promoter a lot like Gatti.”
So when
the trailer that Arch had brought with him on the ship was unloaded, Russell
came by the dock with his US Army weapons carrier truck and hooked onto the
cute little house trailer. With our baggage in the back of the truck, the three
of us, George, Arch and Bill, started out for Nairobi, 330 (ok) miles from
Mombasa. The first 20 miles or so were
nice smooth asphalt surface, and the weather was good, so we merrily headed for
the two day trip to the capital.
I was
pretty well acquainted with George by then, because while we were waiting for
Arch to arrive, we had bent the elbow a couple times in the local hotel
bars. The fact that I was Signal Corps
reserve captain in the US Army helped to solidify our friendship.
We shared our war stories.
When we
headed out of Mombasa headed towards Nairobi, George was driving the truck,
Arch was seated in the other front seat, and I was seated on the outside of the
body I can’t seem to remember what I
sat on, but it was either a battery box or tool box out in the wind, because I
had to hang on to something to keep from falling off.
But in the hot sunshine, it was cooler there than in the back of
the canvas covered cargo space on the truck.
As we
left Mombasa, the three of us were singing a parody of Judy Garland’s song “We’re
off to see the Wizard, the wonderful wizard of Oz.”
We were laughing and singing as we made a good 35 miles and hour
on the smooth roadway, and we were all trying to make up parody verses to the
Oz song as we went rolling along. The
poetry of the lyrics left something to be desired, but it was fun.
You would never have the so-called Italian
commander in a scene like we were living at that moment.
He would have been back in his tent sending
nasty Gatti-grams to the chorus.
I came
up with a parody verse which went something like this: “I’m off to leave that
lizard, a phoney explorer called Gat.”
When the
asphalt roadway ended, the rippling washboard board road began.
It was only slightly wider than one lane,
and composed mostly of red dirt. The
ripples in the road added ripple modulation to our occasional parody singing.
Our
speed now dropped down to less than 20 miles an hour.
Having driven a Gatti truck on the Kenyan roads, I was well
acquainted with the things they called “roads. or highways.”
There was not a lot of traffic; in fact in
those days, there were no big trucks, the railway got most all of that
commerce. There was, however, an
occasionally heavily over-loaded bus with natives riding even on the top of the
bus with their baggage, bouncing down the road. I hated to meet one of them at any time, as we had to go slightly
off the highway to meet them without a crash.
It wasn’t
long before Oboler changed his tune, and wanted to see how the trailer was
riding on the bouncy, washboardy road. I don’t think we had gone another 40 miles when we stopped and Oboler
opened the door of his trailer. He
quietly stood there surveying the interior. The interior was shambles. The big mirror on the back of a door was
shattered, pieces of mirror glass were covering the floor.
The washboard road was raising hell with the
insides of the trailer. The door that held the mirror was hanging off its
hinges. A shelf was loosened and
sagging. Drawers in a cabinet were out of the tracks, the contents dumped on
the floor along with the glass. It was shambles.
Oboler
surveyed the damage. “When I first had
this built, I wondered if this might not happen,” he said softly.
“I had a neighbor handy-man up where we live
in California cobble the inside stuff the way my wife wanted it, and I don’t
think he knew what kind of roads we were going to have here in Africa—or how to
really build a house trailer for rough roads..”
I felt
sorry for Arch. Earlier he had so much confidence in that trailer as a place he
and Eleanor could live for the full duration of his tour..
And so
we changed our tune as we bounced along the so-called 1948 highways in
Kenya. Oboler came up with a song that
went something like this: “Shambles, shambles, my little house is shambles...”
And after a stop for the night at Mac’s Inn
in Mtito Andei, the hotel 160 miles from Mombasa, we bounced our way into
Nairobi just as the second evening’s sun was setting.
My hind end was battered from the washboard orchestration of the
trip. I was happy to see those flat
roads and wide streets again.
It was
at Mtito Andei we first heard about the nearby Tsavo National Park that was about to be dedicated. George, the US army geographer, knew a lot about the place, so he filled us in on the place where “Hippos here, like those everywhere in Africa, live under water during the day, and come out at night to graze because they are herbivorous. At Tsavo people can watch the beasts keeping cool under water on special observation stands in the park. The new stands are built for that purpose; no longer do you have to hang in a tree to see the hippo.”
“I want
to go there when they dedicate the park,” said Oboler. “I’ll bet Americans don’t know the British
have national parks in this country. It’ll be a big surprise to most of them. Most Yankees think Tarzan is a real person that lives here in a tree!”
I had never been in Nairobi before, we Gatti-Hallicrafter’s types had only seen Mombasa, Kwale and the Kilimanjaro area. I was really impressed with the city. We stayed in the Avenue Hotel on the main street of the city for the first few days. We hired an Indian carpenter to rebuild the trailer, and because Oboler had made a lot of advance contacts, we parked it in the back yard of the home of Dr. Louis Leakey, the
superintendent of the Coryndon Memorial Museum. It was located right next to the museum. It was there that I got my first look at the tape recorders we were to use to record Oboler’s radio shows.
He had
both of them packed in a huge crate filled with excelsior, and the two
recorders were mounted especially in Haliburton water tight metal suit
cases. They had their power supply
transformers, etc. mounted in a surplus army machine gun cartridge case that
could be separated from the recording unit itself. Arch said it was because in
the original cabinet the manufacturers placed the transformer so it didn’t
effect the recording machinery with hum. By separating the two parts there was
no interaction.
We also
had a 40 pound battery box and a small gasoline powered generator to charge the
battery. Arch showed me how everything
connected and which microphones he liked to use. So, we were ready to go on
safari and make the radio shows . Arch
had stopped in New York studios of Candid Radio, the very popular show that
Allan Funt had started. He got a lot of his ideas about recording
from Funt and his staff.
For recording with the power supply that had been built for United States 60 cycle 120 volt recorders, and using a transformer to drop the African 50 cycle 240 voltage to match our needs, I discovered that the tape had to played at the same cyclical period used to record. When I asked Arch about that he said, “I know it, but the guy who mounted the recorders in the suit cases, said we could get different sizes of capstans on the recorder or use a special power supply that can be varied to
fit the tape.” .
I had never seen a tape recorder in all my radio work, so I tried making test tapes on each machine with the different power supply sources. I got all that straight in my mind.
The
thing that I didn’t like was the use of a little bitty cathode ray eye that blinked with the sound level changes. I was not sure where to set the volume control for loud African drum beats
because most of the native music consisted of loud drum beats.
The tube blinked with very little signal and so was hard to read. I was used to volume level meters that had certain ballistic features, but I quickly had to learn how to judge the levels on the blinking tube.
I
rewound the mike cables into my own habit system so we could do string them out
in a hurry without tangling up.. I was now ready to ride gain on Arch’s
interviews, the first to be with Dr. Leakey at the museum.
Dr.
Louis Leakey, a paleontologist of note, was a sharp, dynamic speaker, and he
liked to speak out on his life works. He had been born and raised in Kenya and could speak Kikuyu like a
native. His wife, Mary, a non-degree
paleontologist, was mainly raising two kids and waiting for a third at that
time we parked in their yard. Later on she came into her own as a scientist.
The
number two kid, Richard, was between three and four years old.
Somewhere later in my retired years I saved
a Time Magazine cover with Richard’s photo on it. He, like his father, became a scientist of note. But in my days there, Richard was a little kid who could already speak Swahili with the best of them.
I was jealous of his ability to talk in more
than one language, because I was told he could also carry on a conversation in
a tribal language, Kikuyu, which his father also spoke.
I had breakfast with the Leakeys each
morning after I spent the night sleeping in the being fixed up trailer house.
Like
most Europeans living in that part of Africa, they had natives working as
domestic servants: cooks, house boys. etc. The Leakeys seemed very good to their helpers, and I became
indoctrinated to the customs of the country in their house..
One day
Louis cornered Arch and had me do some clandestine recording of some person
that Louis didn’t care for. It wasn’t
Attilio Gatti, but in my conversations with Leakey, I found out he viewed Gatti
with utter disdain. “He’s not much of a
scientist, “ he said as he appraised the commander, “Zero might be a good
number to rate his ability!”
I put
the recorder up in a room above his office in the museum where I could peek
down and see the victim being interviewed by Leakey. I rolled a complete seven inch reel of tape gathering the
interview. Now I can’t remember the
victim’s name or what they talked about, but I do recall Leakey being very good
at getting the man to say what he wanted to hear. I often wish I had made a note of that little operation. That
recording must have been barter for my meals at Leakey’s, I do believe.
I also wish I had made careful notes of all
the people I recorded for Oboler. This was the beginning of a pile of 3M tapes
with the sounds of Africa.
We had
two different tapes for recording. One
was a black oxide, the other had a different backing and carried red oxide. They
each produced a different width on the volume indicator, so I had to test them
to see how to ride gain. It took some
doing to get the best sound on each one.
I was
introduced to Geoff Hutchinson, the publicity man for the Kenyan government. He
was from England and had a good accent in his speech. He had his favorite people in the country that could be interviewed for our recorders. He also loaned us a pickup truck with a native
driver. When Oboler tried to drive the truck himself, a little incident happened
that took some palavering to straighten out. Neither Oboler nor I could drive the pickup, it was the domain of the
native.
At
Nairobi we recorded a traveling Indian vaudeville show. It was a great deal of fun for me, because I had worked now and then in the Fargo Theater as a stage hand during my college days. The troupe of vaudeville artists had recently arrived from Bombay, India, and their acts appealed mainly to the Sikhs of India. We watched the first night’s show from the very front row of the theater, and recorded the show on tape the second night.
The show
had a musical group consisting of a drummer, a sitar player, and a portable
reed piano. They really put out a great
deal of music for their small aggregation. The first night I sat next to Alderman Kaparim, a member of the city
governing board. He had arranged the
recording session and was interpreting
the show for me. The balcony was loaded
with turbaned male Sikhs screaming and hollering at the comedy lines of dialog
performed by the actors. They were
speaking in the Hindustani language, and the laughter was riotous. I couldn’t
understand a word, but I got the idea, and it was fun to watch.
The main
comedian was dressed like Charlie Chaplin, complete with malacca cane He was
dancing around the pretty girls on the stage, waving the cane, and asking each
one if they wanted to sail to America with him. The lyrics sounded like “Americar,
Americar , Americar,” and then they would ask in their language.
The girls all said “NO,” in hindu,
until the last one of them said yes to his
question, and the couple strutted off the stage to the beats of the drummer and
the screams of laughter from the balcony.
After
the show the first night, the alderman invited as to a party for the vaudeville
troupe from India. It was held in a
private room at his son’s restaurant. I
was overwhelmed by the food served in progressive courses - I didn’t count how
many, but they were all suited to my taste for hot stuff.
It was the best meal I had eaten in Africa
to that date. I can now almost taste the curry and other spices that were served that night.
It was that good!
In order
to stay in Kenya I had to get a new visa; therefore, I had to go under the
University of California expedition’s jurisdiction. To do that, I had to get a signature from Wendell Phillips, the leader. So I knocked on his hotel room
door in Nairobi. When the door opened, I was looking down the barrel of an army 45 caliber automatic pistol. I don’t know who he was expecting, but he put the gun down when he saw it was me. That set me wondering, what kind of a dude is this guy? A pistol packing hot shot from the USA? When I told him what I was after, he signed it and sent me on my way. I was happy to leave his presence.
Oboler
had done a lot of lining up stories by contacting various government agencies
long before he arrived on the scene. One of them was to go on safari with one of the government hunters, who
oddly enough, was named John A. Hunter.
Colonel
Richie, the white-haired head of the Kenya Goverment game warden department had
this to say about “J.A,” as he called the Scotsman employee.
“He was the biggest ivory poacher we ever
had in Kenya, and he killed hundreds and hundreds of elephants for their
tusks. He was good at his trade.”
“Did you
ever catch him?” someone asked.
“No,”
answered Ritchie, “we hired him. It
was the best way to keep him under our control.”
The
stories about “Jock” Hunter, as we called him, were legion. It seemed that every person we asked about Hunter had another poaching story to tell.
The one I heard the most went something like
this: “Jock Hunter used to go on safari in elephant country with a hundred
natives as porters. When he got a tusk
on each native’s head, they would march to the coast and sell the ivory to the
north bound arab dhow captains who were looking for cargo.”
So we
went on safari with the master hunter himself. We met him in his camp just before dinner in the evening. He had been waiting for us to arrive, and
had another tent set up for Oboler and Geoff Hutchinson, the Kenya publicity
man and our guide, to bunk in. Eleanor was left in the Norfolk Hotel in
Nairobi.
“I’m out
here to eliminate a rouge leopard that is killing Masai cattle, and that tribe
has huge cattle herds.” With that we
sat down to a very nice wild game feed. Hunter was a fine host.
The subject
changed during the meal, and we discovered Hunter was writing a book. “I like
to write out here on safari, because I’m usually alone, and it’s something to
do in the evenings. It does take a lot of time to scratch it out in longhand.”
After
the meal, I found out I was sleeping in the same tent with Jock.
After Arch and Geoff went to their tent,
Jock showed me the book he was writing. As he flipped the pages he read a paragraph here and there. It was fun
for me to listen to his rich Scottish brrrrrrr voice and watch him put a sly
smile on his face when something was funny.
From our
dining table, I could see a bunch of vultures circling in the nearby sky .
“Jock,” I said, “you haven’t said anything
about those vultures circling over there.”
“I shot
a zebra and laid it out over there for bait. I’m after a rogue leopard..”
Almost
as on cue, one of the vultures swooped out of the circle, folded its wings and
came tumbling out of the sky. It hit the ground with a heavy thump.
“Did you
see that vulture hit the ground, Jock?” I asked.
“I did,”
Hunter replied sucking in between breaths on his battered pipe.
“That old bird must have eaten one of my
strychnine pills. I planted a bunch of them in the dead zebra’s carcass this afternoon.
That happens a lot with me;. I kill vultures by remote control.”
The next
morning at breakfast the talk was about a rifle shot that woke everyone up
during the sleeping period. Jock had
the answer. “Yesterday we set up a dumb killer. That’s a rifle trap, baited so the leopard that is raising ned with the Masai natives’ cattle would trip the trigger and kill himself. That was the shot you heard. Bill and I saw the critter in the
moonlight. He was looking us over as something to eat.”
And that
was true. I woke up in the middle of the night when I heard a coughing sound.
We had the sides of the tent rolled up so we could see in most directions. “There, Bill,”whispered Jock from across the tent, “is the animal I’m hunting this week. That’s a leopard looking us over.
I hope
he finds our gun trap before too long.”
The
leopard must have heard Jock talking, for he turned and ambled away from out
tent area.
It wasn’t
long before we heard the gun shot, and Jock called to me, “That’s the dumb
killer we set for the leopard this
afternoon. We’ll check it out in the
morning. Good night!”
It was
all that simple, he had done his job and was ready to move on.
The next
morning I wanted to see the gun trap and the leopard, but I was too late, the
natives Jock had on his team had already skinned the leopard and had his hide
staked out for curing. “What do you do
with the hide, Jock?” I asked. I had in
mind asking for the colorful leopard hide, and thought this was a good time to
start the bargaining.
“The
hide now belongs to Kenya government, Bill,” replied Hunter.
My plan was shot dead right there and then.
The gun
trap had been made with two posts in the ground just wide enough to let the
leopard’s body go through. On top,
between the two posts, was mounted a rifle pointing down at the ground. With
other nets and tree branches, the bait was laid on the ground and fenced in, so
the only entry was where the rifle was aimed.
Oboler
was terribly impressed by Jock. He kept
talking about him for a long time after that night in Kenya.
I really
enjoyed my days with Oboler. Eleanor
or El, as we called her, had not gone
on our safari with Jock. She had stayed
in Nairobi, so I didn’t really get to know her, but from then on we had her
along on our trips out of the city. She
acted as Arch’s stenographer, and took dictation from him all the time.
At night she transcribed the days dictation
to paper on a portable typewriter..
Arch was
an original writer and he dictated easily when he was driving the car.
He dictated much of the time, but when
something was worth looking at, he didn’t mind being interrupted by either El
or me. He wrote letters, scripts,
notes, and everything in between while we were driving. At first I was a little
scared with his driving, but after a few trips, I felt more at ease with Arch
at the wheel. He did some things that
he really believed in. One such thing was blowing the auto horn when going around a blind curve in the road. In my youth at my grandfather’s ranch five
miles west of Gardiner, Montana and bordering on Yellowstone National Park, we did the same thing when touring in the park. The yellow buses that hauled tourists around the loop, had a strange sounding warbling whistle that the “Gear Jammer,” that’s Yellowstone employee jargon for bus driver, always blew when he came to a blind curve.
Arch may have picked up the idea from that
source. His brother was the public
librarian in Pocatello, Idaho.
Now and
then, when Oboler was sleepy he would put me at the steering wheel.
But I could see he was not too sure of my
driving. He was a sort of back seat pilot.
“He
dictates while driving in California, too,” said Eleanor,”only there he has a
secretary, Jerry Klanke, to do the transcribing. “She’s been with us for three or four years. She puts up with his many whims.”
We were
in and out of Nairobi doing the radio recordings for the shows which the Ziv
company had contracted with Arch. I was watching the calendar getting ready to go to Mombasa and catch the Farrell Lines ship for home.
But I was really liking my job with Oboler. We had become very good friends, and he wanted me to stay with him in the worst way.
So I
did. I took a rain check on the ship
ticket, and wrote my mother a letter asking her to air freight my Eastman Kodak
Cine Special camera that I had bought a couple days after I got out of the
army. It is the one in the picture that
got me my job with Hallicrafters for the expedition.
As a
sidebar to this story, when mother got Northwest Airlines to air freight the
camera to me, it was the first time the Fargo station had shipped a package to
Africa. There was a lot of palavering
about the rate and all the documents to get it through customs. The agent of
the line, Dick Beaton was a ham a good friend, so he found out all the
necessary things for mother. The camera and its lenses came through Kenya customs with no problems.
Arch’s
agent in New York ordered a heavy duty tripod to take the place of the skimpy on we are using in the pictures of me filming an Ngoma or dance bit. That came through quickly by air from New York city as did a shipment of Kodachrome Commercial film that I had been using in my fledgling film making business.
But keep
in mind that the main thrust of Oboler’s work was the recordings for a
syndicated radio show for Ziv. Because televison was starting to boom in the United States, the Ziv people kept asking Arch to do more TV footage for film shows.
Radio was starting to loose its popularity.
Oboler
had made arrangements with Eastman Kodak to develop the film and check its
color, etc. and send us a cable telling any problems with the quality.
So I shot a couple rolls of it and air freighted
it the Rochester EK laboratory for development. I was to send the film to the attention of Ken Mason whom I later got to know real well. Ken later became
the president of the Society of Motion Picture and Television Engineers, (SMPTE) and a vice president of Eastman Kodak.
So with
the camera in hand, we were ready to sail around the African countryside
documenting all kinds of interesting bits of humanity life and struggles.
It was what I thought we were going to do
with the so-called commander, but never achieved any of it much.
With
Geoff Hutchinson paving the way for us, we started recording the music of
Africa. I figured out how to read the flickering volume level tube, and using the red oxide brand new tape from 3M, we started making music memories of the various tribes in the Kenya area.
We kept doing that when we progressed over
to Tanganyika, Rwanda, Urundi, the Belgian Congo and Uganda. After our return
to America the music was used in a Capitol long play record, “Arch Oboler’s African
Adventure, DL 7007. From what I could ascertain, we made the first tape recordings of that part of Africa on location.