Park Hyatt

On December 23rd my sister and I went for drinks at the Park Hyatt bar. It was a festive atmosphere, the people within kind of drunk and excitable. Sitting there I had the feeling of being a child at an adult Christmas party, a place where authority figures whom had always seemed predictable and contained were now wild-eyed and touchy, their laughter and perfume mysteriously amplified.

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Over at the bar sat an older man, his hand inside the dress of a young, very drunk woman. Her body was bending and curving into his, grinding and pressing, the bare flesh of her back exposed like a wound. Careful and still as a predator, he was looking past her incoherent eyes to another point in the evening, waiting.

Another man, probably near 60, had a mop of charismatic grey hair and carried with him the manner that suggested a confident expectation that things were going to work out in his favour. He’d talk to anybody, fully expecting that they’d be happy, even flattered, to chat and then move tables to accommodate him. Familiar in an indistinct way and able to immediately establish a hierarchy within the place, he had the aura of celebrity.

He turned out to be John McDermott, a Scottish-Canadian tenor and sort of middle of the road performer that your parents might really like.

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Incongruously, accompanying him were a group of 20-something Bros, all dressed like they were ready for a night of poker and drinking in a buddy’s kitchen. There was a raw, unkind edge to them and they were treating McDermott like he needed them more than the other way around. They were egging him on, and in short order the room was called to silence and John McDermott sang Danny Boy for us while his crew, holding cell phones in front of their faces like masks, took disinterested videos while continuing their snickering conversations with one another.

The singing was lovely, and many people looked like they felt blessed to have been present for such a spontaneous gift. But still, there was something mechanical and imposed about it, like we were tourists who had just been taken advantage of by sneering locals who now expected us to pay.

I wanted to clear my head a bit from this and stepped out on the balcony. The city was soft, fuzzy and fog-lit, the skyline glowing.

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Near me on the railing arrived one of McDermott’s young crew. He was wearing a black hoodie and had a smudge of a moustache on his upper lip, and rocking his body back and forth he pulled deeply from the back of his throat and horked over the side and down to the street 18 floors below. He then went into the bar and proceeded to talk the really drunk woman away from the older, predatory man, bringing her back to his group, a trophy now, for all of them to enjoy.


Comments

5 responses to “Park Hyatt”

  1. Carol Anne Gillis Avatar
    Carol Anne Gillis

    Lovely. Thanks.

  2. It is beautifully written but with an ugly edge, just for the situation and circumstances.
    Thank you, Michael.

  3. A beautifully painted picture of an evening with an edge. I might have slapped the back of the head of the spitting young man…but older women can get away with that kind of behaviour!

  4. all very creepy and in Top of the Plaza, in my experience.
    The 23rd was Jacks 20th and the four of us were in the patio! Missed it all and you!!

  5. Hey Michael,
    Not so nice for a journalist to infringe somebody’s copyright by posting images without agreement and pay, especially making them look like your own.
    Please remove the Toronto fog picture immediately before we proceed with a legal action.