Feature: Musical chairs
Joseph Boo
Calvin Coker is a billiards player who happens to sing. Or he could
be described as a singer who plays a mean game of billiards.
It doesn’t matter how he’s defined. For Coker, a 45-year-old resident
of Costa Mesa, the most important thing is he makes a living doing the
two things he loves most, playing billiards and singing.
“I’m kind of lucky I guess,” he said. “I get a chance to do both.”
Coker, who has performed in several musicals, is in the midst of
launching Caroling Connections, a group that sings at parties and
functions. But around Orange County, Coker’s name is synonymous with
billiards. He spends about 10 to 15 hours a week giving customers private
billiard lessons. Coker is often seen in some of the bigger pool halls in
the Orange County, such as Diamonds in Brea and the Shark Club in Costa
Mesa.
Ever since he was an 11-year-old pool whiz, Coker has built a
reputation as one of the best billiards players in the nation. He has won
countless tournaments, “a couple of hundred, at least,” Coker said. Two
moments he’s fond of includes a U.S. Open title in 1992 and the Arizona
State championship he won in college.
Two of Coker’s former pupils are now top billiards players. Robin
Dodson is one of only two players in Women’s Professional Billiards
Association history to win consecutive World Championships. Darlene
Stinson is currently ranked No. 26 on the WPBA circuit.
Coker still enters a tournament here and there and expects to
participate in six this year. But most of his time in billiards is
devoted to teaching and running a league at the Q. Club in Costa Mesa.
Coker’s clients include a lot of women and people in wheelchairs.
“I really enjoy watching people improve,” Coker said.
Coker picked up his first billiards cue when he was 11 years old from his father, who was “a real good player,” according to Coker. He also
entered his first tournament that year and finished second.
“I won three dollars for finishing second,” Coker said. “Those three
dollars are mounted on a wall at my mother’s house.”
Ever since he found himself three dollars richer, Coker played in tons
of tournaments and frequented many pool halls. Except for his stint at
Arizona State University, Coker resided in Southern California, settling
in Costa Mesa for the last 20 years. He didn’t immerse himself into the
seedy atmosphere made famous by 1961’s “The Hustler” with Paul Newman and
George C. Scott.
Instead, he frequented pool halls owned by another Hollywood figure,
Doris Day. One of them was the Garden Grove Billiards Club, close to
where Coker grew up. Like the wholesome leading lady of the ‘60s, her
billiards clubs were nice places, but that’s not to say that Coker stayed
completely out of the tank with the pool sharks.
“I went to a couple of the seedier places to go against some of the
better players,” Coker said. “But I can’t say too much about that.”
“I can safely say that I saw some games for $20,000 and up at Las
Vegas with some very powerful people. But that’s all I want to say. I
don’t want to end up at the bottom of Lake Mead,” Coker said with a
laugh.
Ironically, while “The Hustler” made thumb-breaking thugs and smoky
underground parlors synonymous with billiards, it was its 1986 sequel,
“The Color of Money” with Newman and Tom Cruise, which brought billiards
into the mainstream.
“After ‘The Color of Money’ came out, there was a resurgence in
billiards,” Coker said. “A lot of upscale places opened up. A lot of
people who never played billiards before came in. And that drove the
seedier elements away.”
Ever since “The Color of Money,” Coker’s 20-year investment in the
teaching business has grown.
He also saw an increasing demand for his skills with trick shots. That
has led Coker to several high-profile gigs. He performed at Arnold
Schwarzenegger’s 50th birthday party and did the tricks in Budweiser’s
“Ladies Night” commercial and an upcoming Playboy Playmate video with
Miss September.
But Coker’s favorite performances are not in a billiards hall, but in
a concert hall. He has pursued his passion for singing as fervently as
billiards, with Caroling Connections soon to be launched.
Coker picked up singing before billiards. He started when he was 4
years old. He attended college at Arizona State, Redlands and Citrus
College on a music scholarship.
Coker has appeared in some musicals, including “Forever Plaid” at the
Pacific Coast Theater and “Jubilee” at Las Vegas. He then brought his
musical experience to teaching and currently teaches an acting class,
auditioning techniques, at Golden West College.
“I love them both equally,” Coker said. “If I had to give one up, I
would miss one just as much as the other.”
With acting and billiards classes to teach, leagues to run and
Caroling Connections starting up, Coker continues to enjoy doing what he
loves most, playing billiards and singing.
“I got to say I’m pretty lucky,” Coker said. “I’m pretty lucky that I
can play billiards and have music to fall back on.”
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