Authenticity on the sands of Newport Beach
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ROBERT GARDNER
* EDITOR’S NOTE: The Daily Pilot has agreed to republish The Verdict,
the ever popular column written for many years by retired Corona del
Mar jurist and historian Robert Gardner, in exchange for donations to
the Surfrider Foundation. This particular column was originally
published Dec. 26, 1992.
A few weeks ago, the “Thirty Years Ago” column in the Pilot said
that on Nov. 19, 1962, Superior Court Judge Robert Gardner won a
prize for the most authentic sand castle in the First Annual Newport
Beach Sand Castle Building Contest at Corona del Mar State Beach.
Actually, it was the Devine-Gardner family that won that prize.
Jack Barnett, secretary of the Chamber of Commerce, knowing that
Andy Devine and I were friends, asked if I could get Andy to enter
the contest for the publicity connected with Andy’s name as an
immensely popular movie, radio, television and stage personality. I
said I’d try.
I propositioned Andy, and he agreed to go along on condition we
make it a family affair. There was one minor drawback. Andy had grown
up in Arizona. He knew how to ride horses and hunt buffalo or
whatever young people did in that part of the world, but he didn’t
know diddly about building sand castles. On the other hand, my wife
Katie and I had grown up on the beach building sand castles -- Katie
in Belmont Shore, I in Balboa. We assured the Devines that with our
expertise, they’d have no problem mastering the art.
And so, on that fateful day, we arrived at Big Corona, were
assigned a plot of sand and told to start building a sand castle.
Andy said that with his vast executive experience, he would be
building superintendent, and his wife Doagie, Katie and I would be
the coolie laborers. No fool he.
Andy settled his considerable frame into a comfortable beach
chair, and Doagie, Katie and I started a sand castle. As countless
thousands of children have done on Southern California beaches, we
dug a hole in the damp sand, put the dug sand in a nice round pile,
then as water seeped into the hole, scooped out the liquid sand and
carefully dripped it into cute little spires on our pile of sand.
Voila! To me, that was a sand castle.
About that time, I looked around and to my horror saw that the
other contestants were armed with trowels and T-squares and measuring
tapes and shovels and rakes and were building honest-to-God castles
with walls and turrets and battlements and moats. Others were carving
out whales and dragons with scalpels and other sculptors’ tools.
I looked at our pitiful little offering and suggested we get the
hell out of there. This was embarrassing. Andy was made of stronger
stuff. “Drip!” he ordered, so Doagie, Katie and I dripped and dripped
and dripped.
Finally, the judging time came. A crowd of men carrying clipboards
arrived. Each appeared suitably serious, wise and sagacious. The
leader, obviously an architect or structural engineer of note, looked
at our pitiful little drip castle and said, “What is that?”
In retrospect, I must admit that compared with all the other
architectural and construction feats they had seen, our cluster of
drip spires must have looked something like a large porcupine.
Then, Andy Devine had his finest hour. Andy was a large man. As he
rose to his feet, he towered over the judges. He glared at them from
under the most formidable set of eyebrows in the entertainment
industry. His voice, ordinarily a husky squeak that couldn’t quite
find its pitch, dropped a full two octaves as he rasped, “That, sir,
is a sand castle, an authentic sand castle!”
Thoroughly cowed, the judges prompted awarded us a prize for the
most authentic sand castle -- which it was. I’ve gone to several of
those contests since and seen some imposing and impressive
constructions, and never have I seen another authentic drip sand
castle. So, I guess the Devines and Gardners are the retired unbeaten
champs of authentic sand castle building.
* ROBERT GARDNER, a Corona del Mar resident, is a retired judge
and a longtime observer of life in Newport Beach.
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