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The Devil To
Play
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| Devil’s delight:
dancing at fund-raising celebration |
| Photo: Les Todd |
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You're on the beach, and you've just realized you're naked!" This
was among the scenarios given to each of the seven contestants--six
men and one woman--in the mascot tryouts held in the dance studio
of the Wilson Recreation Center in April. The first would-be Blue
Devil to try out--in shoulder pads and the Blue Devil head--was
Ben Wolinsky, a junior.
Wolinsky had been Eddie the Eagle in high school and Mr. Goodbear
at a children's hospital in Winnipeg, his hometown, and the experience
showed. Wolinsky was a crafty devil. Upon finding himself in the
nude, he covered his crotch with both hands, crouched down, and
scurried across the room. Then he stopped. He looked around. And
slowly he straightened.
Wolinsky's beach, he decided, was a nude beach! Yes, French or
Italian, it appeared. And suddenly, Wolinsky was at ease. Indeed,
a survey of the land (hand above the eyes to block the sunlight)
revealed that Wolinsky was not the only naked person around. His
enormous horned head, devilishly grinning and eternally wide-eyed,
turned to gaze at beautiful nudes walking past him in the sand.
While Wolinsky played Blue Devil, the Mascot Evaluation Committee,
an assortment of cheerleaders, veteran mascots, and cheerleading
coach Teresa Ward, played Cameron Crazies, prompting and reacting
and, at the sight of Wolinsky, bursting into laughter. Naked as
the day he was born, he arched his back proudly, put his hands
behind his head, and strutted off.
Since mascot tryouts don't happen every year (usually every two
or three years, whenever a Blue Devil graduates), they have something
of a World Cup quality to them, a special significance bestowed
by their rarity. When tryouts do happen, they attract some of the
best improvisers on campus, students with oversized mascot rÈsumÈs
and a passion for pleasing crowds. Just as many Duke students were
valedictorians and top musicians and star athletes at their high
schools, others were the War Eagles and Panthers and Kangaroos
cheering them on, the furry embodiment of school spirit known to
all and, yet, to no one.
"On the one hand, you're the center of attention. You're alone
on the stage. You feel like everybody is looking at you," says
Charlie Suwankosai, a sophomore from Texas, who was a mascot in
high school and tried out for the Blue Devil. "But at the
same time, you're anonymous, so you can do anything you want. You
could, like, high-five Nan or something." Suwankosai is small
in stature, five feet four or so, and speaks with a resigned softness,
as though he expects you to interrupt and wouldn't mind much if
you did. But Suwankosai is drawn to the loud and expressive.
In high school, he played the trombone with its big slide and heroic
sound that magnified his voice (he plays at Duke, too). In his
senior year, Suwankosai became the Elkins High Knight, defender
of the "Castle of Champions."
Suwankosai, it turned out, was a natural Knight. He did so well,
in fact, that at the National Cheerleading Association Tournament
in Houston, where he mimed baking cookies laced with "Knight
spirit," he placed fourth overall. Afterwards, the Baylor
Bear approached him--not menacingly but with an offer. The bear
was the N.C.A. head mascot, and he asked Suwankosai to coach high-school
mascots at the N.C.A. camp.
Suwankosai has taught mascot camp every summer since. He teaches
big gestures (place hands over ears and twist torso for "disbelief")
and little tricks (make the facial expressions inside the head;
it actually helps you convey them outside). The first thing any
mascot--animal, object, or other--learns, he says, is silence. "Never,
ever talk. That's the golden rule." The rule doesn't just
apply to talking. A mascot cannot make any noise at all, no matter
what the occasion.
Before the Blue Devil tryouts, judges warned contestants about
the golden rule. "No talking inside the head," said Mac
Conforti, a junior mascot, who was calling out the scenarios. But
when it started, Conforti applied the pressure, yelling out things
that would make almost anyone cry out in ecstasy. "Blue Devil," he
shouted, "J.J. Redick just set a new school record for three-pointers!" Passersby
on a walking tour of campus pressed amused faces up against the
glass. Fortunately, though, no children witnessed the event. "Children
get kinda' freaked out when they see the Blue Devil without his
head on," says Conforti.
When the head isn't being occupied, it's carried in a gray felt
drum case. It weighs ten pounds, and is made mostly of fiberglass
and foam. Looking at it, you would probably never guess that it's
almost thirty years old, and that's because every couple of years
it gets sent back to the shop in Cincinnati that made it (StageCraft
Inc.) for a nose job or a new ear or a fuller goatee.
At the end of the day, the head had a new brain. The winner was
later notified by e-mail. But his (or her) name would not be re-vealed
in public. "No names," said Ward, the cheerleading coach. "The
Blue Devil is the Blue Devil."
--Patrick Adams
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