Phil Shane is ministering to the lovesick,
the aged, the hip and the drunk. From atop his high stage, he bends down for
the laying on of hands: in this case, a slow, tender kiss (sans tongue) for
a giggling blonde who pretends to faint and then snatches his long white
scarf as a pilgrim’s relic.
The Celebration Lounge at Las Vegas’
Tropicana Hotel and Casino is spacious, with high ceilings accented in
copper and teal. Low, comfortable bucket chairs in what seems to be black
pleather surround tiny tables littered with the remains of margaritas. The
stage is roomy enough for his rack of sequined jackets, which he swaps
according to his mood or song list.
This is neither Santa Ana’s crusty
Fling—equal parts groping 70-year-olds and pierced kids, where Shane sings
from behind and sometimes atop the C-shaped piano bar—nor Dana Point’s
graying and wealthy Harpoon Henry’s. It is not Fullerton’s slightly creepy
2J’s—a fun dive with just a whiff of speed freak—or the crowded, literally
underground La Cave. It is none of the OC spots at which Shane has been
gigging since 1972. Thirty years. And after 30 years, this, baby, is
Vegas, even if his slot is in the middle of the afternoon.
At 5 p.m., the small crowd is still
slumped into its seats. To our right is a quartet of cute folk in their very
early 20s, possibly even late teens. The girls are pretty if not flashy, and
their companions are dorky Midwestern guys. All are sullen for a while. But
soon they understand the program: Shane will sing every song they throw at
him, smiling like Stevie Wonder all the while. And if he doesn’t have the
request on the minidiscs he switches during the set—this is professional
karaoke, hon—then he will pick up his guitar and play it. "Copacabana"?
Certainly! A little Creedence? He’ll get on it next! Right now, he’s gonna
do a little Tom Jones. Are there any Tom Jones fans here tonight? He leads
us through "Delilah" and "What’s New, Pussycat?" Like Jones, Shane’s black
pants are so tight that if he were a woman, he’d be sporting a cameltoe. I
didn’t think that in this environment, he’d come so close to touching his
unit, but indeed his hand is mere millimeters away. Aw, yeah!
Shane will work so hard tonight, taking no
breaks, pouring gallons of sweat and affixing a smile to his face every
second he’s onstage—but it’s never, ever fake. Indeed, he would work equally
hard if there were only three tables full. All he wants, God willing, is for
people to enjoy themselves and have a little party. He just wants to be
loved.
By 6 p.m., to the rollicking strains of
John Cougar Mellencamp’s "Hurts So Good," the girls talk the boys into
dancing: though goofy, the boys try their best, undulating clumpily while
the girls shake their buns with sexy grace. Later, two much cockier young
men in caps and baggy jeans (they look like Irvine guys trying to be
Huntington Beach thugs but unwilling to commit to the tattoos) will come and
hover over the girls until the Iowans are banished. Vegas is a soap opera,
and we are glued to it.
But when Shane puts on his white, studded
Elvis jacket and silly, big sunglasses, the interlopers have not yet
appeared. Iowa is still happily in the game, and the quartet whoops and
hollers.
A break is enforced at 7:30 p.m. so that a
big spin of big prizes can commence. Shane, as any of his Orange County fans
will attest, does not take breaks, but this is Vegas, and he’s not
going to make waves. The spin is lame: nobody wins the $1,000 top prize or
even the $100 prize. Instead, each of the spinners is granted dinner at
Calypso’s (the Trop’s coffee shop) or tickets to Rick Thomas, who, judging
by his publicity still, is a lonely Siegfried and Roy knock-off without the
aid and comfort of a big-haired partner/longtime companion. A lovely
showgirl with a face straight out of 1934 (Clara Bow lips and porcelain
beauty) points to stuff, her gut sucked in every second of her shift. Her
teal thong looks terribly uncomfortable to the feminine eye, but the men in
my party are oblivious to her pain. They are cruel and demanding in their
love.
Every Tuesday through Saturday Shane’s set
begins at 3 p.m.—an uncivilized hour in Las Vegas, Nevada—and ends by 8:20
p.m. The Trop management actually wanted him to do sets that ran slightly
shy of an hour, with breaks in between. But Phil Shane does not do that to
his fans. And by 8:20 p.m., everyone is a fan: old, mean Danish
ladies will be stealing any seat that’s left unattended for even a moment.
In his silly glasses, grinning like a
moron, Shane sings the Elvis classic "Love Me." I climb onto my date’s lap
and sprawl there, overcome. The quartet are no longer wry, laconic sneerers.
They sway, enthralled and touched. They understand now. They get it. They
have joined the Church of Phil. And watching over it all, enthroned at a
table surrounded by Orange County friends and gazing at him with an
omnipresent shy smile, is Phil’s wife of eight years, Michlene. Love him?
Oh, she does!
Treat me like a fool/Treat me mean and
cruel/But love me/Wring my faithful heart/Tear it all apart/But love me.
Phil Shane was born in Tupelo,
Mississippi, in 1949. From the stage, he looks like a young-hearted 44, but
as soon as he steps off it, his age shows. It’s uncanny: the distance is the
same, but all of a sudden, he’s 52 and really sweaty. He has never
held another job. Not waiter or dogwalker. From the age of 13, he has made
his living playing in the band.
Until the mid-’60s, Mississippi was a dry
state. But Tupelo’s sheriff had a supper club outside town: the Chicksa
Lodge. Jerry Lee Lewis played there. Singers came from Nashville and
Alabama, even Florida. And from the time he was 13, Shane played there, too.
Back then, he was on bass; the karaoke machine had yet to be invented.
"This is kind of personal," Shane says in
his low, rich Southern voice, but he doesn’t say the magic words "off the
record."
"My dad had a terrible gambling problem,
and he actually lost our house in a game of dominoes. My mom left him that
same day. I think I got out with my clothes and my record player."
For this reason, when I take him to shoot
craps later in the evening, Shane has no idea how the game works. He simply
doesn’t gamble.
His mother was a bookkeeper for a dry
cleaner, and though they were never lacking in food or shelter, making ends
meet in Mississippi was hard to do. The money Shane’s gigging brought in
helped immeasurably. Still, his mother’s brother, a minister, made Shane’s
immorality the subject of his sermon one Sunday. He called him out by name,
said Phil was going straight to hell, working as he was in a place rife with
booze and loose women. Shane still hasn’t gotten over the embarrassment and
the injustice of it.
"He knew I was helping my mom out," he
says. "He knew my dad wasn’t there."
He married young, a next-door neighbor,
and together they moved to Orange County in the early ’70s. Why OC? That’s
where Disneyland was.
Shane and his wife lived in an RV parked
out behind Reagan’s (now Patsy’s), a Mission Viejo bar where they
sang.
And then in 1988, Michlene came into the
picture. Michlene was the mother of nine-year-old twins, and her husband had
passed away. She was stunned by Phil’s talent, and she "tried really hard to
like his wife, too," she says. But he was married, and though she had very
strong feelings for him, Michlene decided she had been put into his life for
another purpose. She would be his manager. She would serve his talent. She
would make him go places, no matter how many obstacles he came up with.
"It’s ‘I-can’t-because,’" says Michlene,
sounding as dismissive as her sweet voice can. "‘I-can’t-because.’ I don’t
want to hear, ‘I-can’t-because.’ I asked Phil, ‘What do you want
to do?’ and he said he wanted to play the Dana Point Harbor, but he couldn’t
because . . . Well, I got him into the harbor and asked, ‘What do you want
to do now?’" Eventually, Phil was sneaking into Michlene’s bedroom window.
In ’92, he moved in. He divorced his wife, and in ’94, Phil and Michlene
married.
Now I’ll say it: Michlene and Phil look
positively bizarre together. Phil is 5-foot-3 (and a half), and has a puffy
Neil Diamond pompadour that on a good day takes 10 minutes to blow-dry and
on a bad day . . . "You don’t want to be in the same house on a bad day!"
says Michlene.
Michlene is 5-foot-8 (and a half), and to
speak plainly, she’s a lot of woman. Her dark hair is gelled and
country-big. Her nails are long and red. Her stunning blue eyes are thickly
lined; it’s easy to get lost in them. In fact, she resembles Elizabeth
Taylor. But however mismatched they may at first appear, their devotion is
so palpable it can incite a melancholy envy.
There she sits in the back with her
friends. Does she go to all his shows? "He likes to have me with him," she
says softly. And now she is with him in Vegas, skipping home on Mondays and
Tuesdays to check her P.O. Box—she’s a theatrical manager for performing
twins with her business, Carbon Copies—and then heading back to the bright
lights of the Celebration.
Ten years ago, she wouldn’t have been able
to, but heck, she’s got a cell phone; she can conduct her business wherever
she is. Before every show, she sews four white scarves for him to hand out
to other ladies. She makes fans from construction paper, a cartoon Phil
photocopied on each one. After Phil’s set, you will see Michlene helping him
transport his many jackets. If they were home in OC, they would cap off the
evening in their aquamarine and redwood hot tub. "It’s our favorite thing
ever!" Michlene says. And what does she love most about him? She thinks for
a moment. "His passion for everything that he loves," she says, and she
pulls herself up to her full height and speaks with quiet pride. "Including
me."
Phil Shane is making his long-overdue
Vegas debut because Michlene made it happen. There was no "I-can’t-because."
So now the glittering Tropicana is giving him an extended tryout, running
through May 5. Michlene, ever the optimist and businesswoman, has signed a
six-month lease on an apartment there.
"It’s only $469 per month, and it’s a
write-off!" she says. "Even if he doesn’t get it, well, we’ll have a place
to stay when we come here for the weekend!" Of course, not for a second does
she believe he won’t be offered the job. She doesn’t believe in won’ts. I
ask Phil what he loves most about Michlene.
"She’s the most positive person I’ve ever
met in my life," he says. "If she has a negative thought, she just throws it
right out."
If Phil belongs in Vegas—and he does—she
will see to it. She will make it happen. And they will be together,
preferably in a hot tub.
The same positivity Michlene brings to the
business end of Phil’s career, he delivers to the audience. Let’s face it:
the act is dorky. He sings Neil Diamond and "God Bless the USA," backed up
not by a band but by a machine. His outfits are full of sequins. He’s really
short. But as God is my witness, the love he projects from that stage is
given back to him a thousandfold. I ask him if he’s ever had a bad show.
"Well, sure, I guess," he says. "When I was sick."
He once played a New Year’s Eve show with
strep throat; his doctor assured him that though it would be painful, it
wouldn’t damage his vocal cords. And he sang through the pain, caring only
that the audience had a good time. "I didn’t want people to know I was
feeling bad," he says. "I wanted it to be a party!"
The people of Orange County have felt the
love. Debbie Bartz, a Shane friend for 25 years, is the president of his fan
club, which boasts 35 or 40 members (the $5 dues cover postage for the photo
and newsletter). Two years ago, she got his face tattooed on her back. "It
started out as a dare," she says, "but then I thought, I’ve known him and
loved him for a long time." A few years ago, when Debbie’s daughter got
married, it was Phil Shane who gave away the bride.
While Shane’s been playing to the
bluehairs at Harpoon Henry’s for quite a while, as well as to the seedier
variety of bluehair that inhabits the Fling for four years now, Robert
Williams (of Big Sandy fame) was responsible for introducing him to the
scenesters who adore him so persistently now.
"It was at Big Sandy’s Christmas party
that all the kids saw me for the first time, I think," Shane tells me.
"Weren’t you at that party?" In fact, I was. That was in 1998, and until
this Vegas trip, Shane and I have never so much as said hello, but he
remembers nonetheless.
"That’s the thing," Robert says. "When you
walk in, he takes a minute and looks up and smiles. He’s so happy to see
you. Even when he doesn’t know you, he makes you feel like a personal
friend." Robert pauses, trying to find the right words. "You can tell he
truly just loves what he’s doing. I’ve gone to see other lounge singers . .
." He trails off. What he means is that some lounge singers are hacks. And
Phil Shane is not. He smiles every second he’s onstage because he’s in love
every second he’s there. I ask Michlene if he’s always like that.
"Oh, he gets moody!" she assures me. "But
never when he’s onstage. I want to build him a stage in the house, and
whenever he gets grumpy, I’ll tell him, ‘Go get on that stage! Right now!’"
Back at the Tropicana on this Saturday
night, we yell out from the crowd for "I’m a Believer." "Oh, that’s a great
one!" says Shane happily. "Neil Diamond wrote this one, recorded by the
Monkees. I don’t have it on disc, but I’ll play it for you!" He picks up his
guitar, slings it over his shoulder, and starts strumming wildly. He looks
up toward heaven—or, in the Tropicana’s case, toward the gilded ceilings—and
I swear his face is lit with a heavenly glow. At that moment, we are all
believers. We all ache for love.