QUEEN OF THE SILVER DOLLAR
There is still splendour, faded now but still showing in the flashes and glitter of bright colour here and there on her clothes. A silk rose, silver combs in her hair, a bright wide ribbon. A deep tight belt accentuates the waist, sometimes black if her tops or skirt has colour, sometimes red or silver or maroon or even white if her skirt or dress is dark. And jewellery, bracelets, rings and necklaces festoon her fingers, wrists and neck adding sparkle and noise to her outfits.
Faded maybe but no fear of colours, black may cover and hide what other women see as undesirable deteriorations in their figures, breasts that are no longer as firm and full as they were, hips that are wider than vanity allows for or bellies which demand discretion and may well have outwitted even the most ingenious of control garments but she has the savvy and style to carry the colours and her figure will still turn heads and raise the heart rate .
Music had been her life and despite the ups and many downs her spirit had survived them all but the glitter and glitz of the big nights has gone and in Dublin's fair city what is left of her days of stardom lives on only in the minds of adoring fans for whom Rose Farrell is still their Queen of the Silver Dollar.
Years ago Dolan's bar in Ballymore had been renamed the Silver Dollar in honour of the lass from their county who had taken the country and western world by storm and found fame across the globe. A couple of owners had the idea of creating a country and western pub in this very ordinary back street bar and hall in this very ordinary Irish midlands town and bring singers and bands every night of the week to draw the fans from the surrounding district. Word would spread, customers would come from even farther away as bigger acts were engaged and the Silver Dollar Bar in Ballymore would be the centre of entertainment.
The enterprise started off well but struggled, drowned, gave up and vanished. The music was never more than a background to the serious work of drinking. The vision of fans and customers relaxing at the tables immersed in the music may have been reality at times for ten or fifteen minutes but eventually no one even noticed or at best the whole thing deteriorated into a raucous sing along.
Bands and singers refused to come, their money was never safe and there were too many bad nights where they were handed only a fraction of their fee.
Charlie Driscoll took the old place over and longed to bring some life back, longed to see its dance hall filled with happy punters and with a passion for country music would have given anything to make it happen.
He knew that only one act could do it for him and if he could get her for just one night it might just kick start the revival.... Rose Farrell, at one time the biggest name in Irish music before she took her talent to the States, it had to be Rose but it could never be more than a dream.
She was the only one who could fill the pub and the only singer who could hold their attention. The punters knew her, knew her story and knew that almost every sad ballad she sang held an element of her life. They knew that the tremor in her voice wasn't there for effect nor were the tears, they were real and were there because she had lived the sadness and trials in their words.
She had the presence to carry it off, a charisma created around the quality of her voice , her sincerity, the triumphs of her singing career and the sheer attraction of her style and looks. All of this bound by the awe of knowing that she had been up there, at the top, she had toured a good part of the world, had rubbed shoulders with stardom, she had been stardom, her records were best sellers. But there was more, she was accessible, she offered a chance to fulfil dreams, to live out fantasies if you were lucky enough. Just as in the song that had made her famous the jesters flocked around her, trying to win her favours, to see who gets to take the Queen of the Silver Dollar home.
But that fame was all many years ago, two crooks of managers not only got into her bed but into her bank account and left her almost penniless and with two miscarriages her world crumbled and before long she had become a forgotten face in a sea of talent which her particular part of the music business seemed to spawn.
Home to Ireland was all she could think about and selling more than her soul and her story in the bars of that tinsel town in the States which had once looked up at her talent on stage set out to try and gather enough cash to take her home. Many of the men she serviced had no idea who it was that was providing their pleasure, one or two remarked on familiarity of some sort but put it down to probably having seen her before on the street or in the neighbourhood. Most were kindly enough, she avoided the drunks and the junkies and still had looks and shape enough to be desirable. She was able to choose her clients, there was money to be made and enjoyment in the obvious desire of her men but it was unrelenting and there were times when she simply didn't want to see and smell the inside of another bar .
Rose allowed no serious attachments, no one came home to her room. All business was transacted in five dollar an hour rent rooms and in the backs of cars. There were regulars and that made things a lot simpler and safer and they knew if their time was limited she would take them in the car park of whatever bar was arranged.
It was years before she could make her move. The plan was to return to Dublin and try to find a way back into entertainment. Memories tended to be longer at home, she would be remembered as a star, there would be work and a living could be had.
A month back home served to remind her just how parochial it all was. The strange world of stetsoned entertainers singing the same old stuff in their same old copy cat style in that awful version of an American accent.