Inside the Mummers
Two new books examine an underappreciated
Philadelphia tradition
By SCOTT FLANDER
Philadelphia Daily News
For the Daily News
SOMETIMES IT TAKES an outsider to
make you appreciate what you have.
To many Philadelphians, the Mummers
are just a group of people who get
dressed up in outrageous costumes
and march in a parade every New
Year's Day.
Sure, they're part of Philly, but
really for just one day, right?
Other than the occasional string
band that you might see performing
at some event, most of the year the
Mummers are pretty much out of
sight, out of mind.
Now, Temple University Press has
published two books on the Mummers
by people who aren't from
Philadelphia, and they paint a
considerably fuller picture.
Although the books could not be more
different - one is a sociological
study, the other a collection of
color photographs - they have the
same message:
Throughout the year, not just on New
Year's, the Mummers are an important
presence in the working-class city
neighborhoods from which they arise.
They not only create a sense of
community, they also help keep those
neighborhoods vibrant.
In other words, the Mummers play
such a critical role in the life of
the city that they should be
nurtured, even treasured, as a kind
of natural resource.
"It's a taken-for-granted part of
Philadelphia," said Patricia Anne
Masters, a sociology professor at
George Mason University in Northern
Virginia, who has written "The
Philadelphia Mummers: Building
Community Through Play" ($22.95).
"I don't think the people that run
the city realize how central it is
to the communities where the
clubhouses are and the parade is put
together."
Photographer E.A. "Ed" Kennedy III,
who is originally from New Orleans,
is amazed at how little appreciation
Philadelphia seems to have for the
Mummers.
"We're tolerating them, we're
putting up with them," he said.
"There is really an antipathy toward
white, working-class culture in the
United States."
Kennedy, who is African-American,
added, "If these guys had been
black, there would have been four or
five books like this."
His own book, "Life, Liberty and the
Mummers" ($35) has many spectacular
images of Mummery as most
Philadelphians know it - marchers in
backpieces and full
feather-and-sequin regalia,
strutting up Broad Street and along
Market to cheering crowds.
But much of the book focuses on the
hidden life of the Mummers. Kennedy
takes us inside the clubhouses,
where members relax with a football
game on TV, practice their songs, or
joke with each other over mugs of
beer. He takes us under I-95 in
South Philly, where young club
members, bundled up against the cold
in jackets and sweatshirts, run
through their dance routines.
And then there are the striking
nighttime photos of the Mummers
serenading their families and
neighbors after the parade on "Two
Street" in South Philly, where
clubhouses and rowhouses sit side by
side.
This is where the Mummers and
spectators alike seem most joyous in
Kennedy's photos, where the sense of
community that both authors portray
seems most apparent.
When he took his first Mummers
photos in 2003, Kennedy wasn't
intending to put together a book. A
former newspaper photographer, he
had recently moved to the city with
his wife, who is from Philadelphia.
He was doing commercial photography
and decided to attend the parade
that year to take some "stock"
photos.
Kennedy had never seen the Mummers
before, and as he started snapping
photos, a group of lawyers and their
wives in the crowd, along with a
Philly cop, filled him in on the
differences between string bands and
fancy brigades. He realized the
parade wasn't the commercial venture
he had expected.
"I'm noticing, this is really
homemade," he recalled. "This is
really folk art. This isn't like
some corporation built these floats.
These are real people."
He saw a brass band with black
members, playing the theme from "The
Flintstones," and he was reminded of
the African-American brass bands
that perform in the neighborhoods of
New Orleans during Mardi Gras.
After the parade, Kennedy watched
the serenades on Two Street. He was
hooked.
A few days later, he visited a
couple of bars in South Philly,
asking patrons whether they
recognized the people in his photos,
so he could talk to them further.
"They said, 'That's my cousin.
That's my brother.' You kind of
realize how interwoven this is with
family and community."
Kennedy spent several years with the
Mummers and got inside their world,
and their heads. The Mummers opened
themselves up to him willingly, he
said.
"People almost desperately wanted me
to tell their story," he said. "When
people invest that much in a
photojournalist, you really have a
responsibility to them."
The book has been a big hit with the
Mummers, said Kennedy. At a recent
funeral for one Mummer, Kennedy was
asked for an autographed book that
could be put in the coffin.
He later thanked the man's friends
for letting him come to the funeral.
They replied, "Ed, you're part of
our family now."
The Mummers fell into Masters' lap
as well. As she puts it, "The
Mummers found me."
She was searching for a topic for
her doctoral thesis in sociology,
and during a visit to Philly decided
to see the Mummers on New Year's Day
in 1995.
"It was so wonderful and strange and
exotic," she recalled. "I wondered
why they do it."
She decided to learn more about the
Mummers and realized that this
century-old tradition was part of
the lifeblood of many working-class
neighborhoods. This, she decided
would be the subject of her thesis.
As she did more research, Masters
began focusing on the importance of
"play" in the world of Mummers. Part
of that is the sheer fun they have,
but there's also the element of
escape.
"They can experiment to show a
different part of themselves," she
said. "You can be an ironworker one
moment, and the next moment be a
performer under a fancy suit."
It's through the shared experience
of play, said Masters, that the
Mummers are bound together and to
the community.
For many club members, she said,
being a Mummer "is as important to
them as their work lives are."
Like Kennedy, Masters got close to
the Mummers. Told she couldn't
understand the parade unless she
became part of it, she helped out
the Golden Crown Fancy Brigade with
its costume preparations - "I burned
my thumb a lot with glue guns" - and
marched with the club two different
years.
Masters' book, adapted from her
thesis, chronicles the history of
the Mummers and describes, from a
sociological perspective, its many
rituals and traditions.
Masters believes Mummer
neighborhoods have a richer life
because of them - something that's
not fully appreciated by the
politicians and the city as a whole.
"I really think the Mummers aren't
as valued as they should be in their
own home."
Though when she told one Mummer,
"You have a wonderful culture here,"
he had a quick response:
"We don't do ballet." * |