Images of Madrid: The Three Kings’ Day Parade

This is no mistake, though could easily have been one, knowing my page.  The image on your left is a non-image, it’s “a there” that is not there for your viewing pleasure.  I was at a friend’s office with my two daughters to watch the Three Kings’ Day Parade (The Feast of the Epiphany no longer says much to a lot of people other than it might refer to a white fresh water bird eating a large meal), because Madrid’s is the most famous of them all.  Parents tell their children “These are the real thing! The real kings.  They come to Madrid.”, which is surely what moms and dads around the land tell their children in all the towns and villages throughout the town.

            This parade that you cannot see used to kick off right across the street from where I live, in the Retiro Park, but they moved it over to the Paseo de la Castellana, oh I’d say some seven years ago, to turn it into a bigger and more spectacular event.  That was back when Spain had money and could afford these things.  Well, it couldn’t afford them back then either, but the difference was everyone liked to pretend it could.

            My friend has his law firm in a building right smack on the Castellana just above the Plaza de Colón (That’s the literal equivalent of “Columbus Square”, not a hotel for people with intestinal disorders), and from the height of the fourth floor, we are afforded a terrific vista.  It used to be a cozy gathering of just a few, but the numbers have risen, as well as word has spread, and now we can call it snug, but in a suffocating sense, if you know what I mean.

            In any event, it was fun to get together and toast with some cava and dive our faces into yet more Three Kings’ cake.  This has always been the torte par excellence on these dates, but more recently, the numbers have increased, as has the quality, I am happy to say.  The cake has never been a big hit with me, but before it was like sinking your teeth into a stack of envelopes.  Now, for the most part, the good bakers of this city have come up a recipe moist enough to make indulging generally something you won’t choke on and occasionally even a pleasure.

            The majority of us would migrate from the table over to the balcony to poke our heads out, then back to table again, chatting with friends and joking with children as they got all revved up for the Three Wise Men to make their way down the street in flashy floats.

            This parade is always slow to get up and running and the children in the bleachers, in their despair after such a long wait, will cheer for just about anything.  A lone cop on a motorcycle puttering down the road drew a rousing round of applause.

            Finally, the first sign of life appeared and the entertainment-starved crowd let out a roar.  Then you had the usual fare of bands, a few gaudily-colored floats featuring famous Christmas stories and Disney characters, the traditional banner tossers, a ballerina twirling and somersaulting while suspended beneath an enormous balloon, and that sort of thing.  Then came the military guard, the royal mounted guard, ducks, sheep, camels, and more exotic fauna like elephants.  But it was all stop and go.  Stuttering and puttering, the way these things happen to work when they try to deal with the logistics of a well-timed parade.

            Adults find this annoying, but children find it unbearable.  At the office the kids would stand up and run for more cake, get a bunch of sugar in them, and start really buzzing around like overheated flies.  Then they would run back to the balcony and take a peek, and dart away again.  There was no sign of the kings and the show was getting somewhat dull with all the unexpected stalling, except for the moment when one of the elephants paused to take a mid-walk pee.  The animal had been lumbering down the street when all of the sudden it stiffened up and readied itself.  If dragging a dog off the path in order for it to do its duty was tough enough, here there was little choice but to sit and wait.  It gushed out, I tell you, and sent a tsunami of urine right for the other side of the street where the crowd panicked to avoid the impending flow.  The rest of us who were out of harm’s way got a good laugh out of it.

            Speaking of basic needs, it was just about that moment when one of my daughters announced that she needed to go, and so I showed her through to the back of the labyrinthlike office where there was a restroom and then returned to the window.  Just then I saw the first of the three kings coasting by freely the way Barbie drives her convertible along the California coast.  At that speed it was hard to get glimpse of which one it was, but the white beard gave it away.  It was King Melchor, Melchior in English, my daughter’s favorite.  So, I raced back to the bathroom, told her to make it snappy, and then we tore back to catch the rest of the show.

            By the time we got there, the time elapsed had barely eclipsed 30 seconds, all we could see was the back of the final float with Balthazar hurriedly waving to children below.  Caspar must have been sandwiched in between there, but I can only assume this because I had no visual confirmation.

            That was it.  Done.  There was nothing left.  Whole families were descending from the bleachers and heading home.  The sanitation department was scrubbing the inundation caused by Dumbo.  The Three Wise Men had zipped by.  I was dumbstruck.  For an hour and a half, the cast of the opening show dawdled around, sometimes taking breaks of up to ten minutes, only for the main event to sail by as if they were late for a wedding.  Not that it was going to keep me awake at night, but I did feel for the children.

            “My guess,” said a friend at my side as we saw Balthazar’s float disappear behind the horizon like a distant boat at night, “Is that they are low on candy due to the crisis and can’t afford to slow down too much.”

            I nodded with taking my eyes off the street being abandoned by thousands of somewhat stunned fans.  Sadly enough, it made sense to me.

            I have spared you the pain of viewing the tragedy, mainly because I missed it myself.

15 Días de Navidad (excerpts): Reyes

Como no puede ser de otra manera, las navidades en España tienen que exceder estas fechas de excesos en los demás países.  En Estados Unidos hay una especie de bajón brutal después del 25 de diciembre, que se remonta una vez para nochevieja, pero después, vamos, fuera.  Se acabó.  Lo único que lo salva es nuestro inmenso afán por las luces, que permanecen en los árboles y los tejados son más bien un producto de la dejadez de los seres humanos más que por una necesidad de perpetuar la alegría.  Recuerdo cuando la cara de mi padre se pondría como un traje de Papá Noel cuando veía que, a mediados de febrero, aún no habíamos quitado las luces de los acebos.  “Ayer fue San Valentín, por el amor de Dios.  ¡¿Queréis quitar las luces?!”

            En España queda el último coletazo de fiestas que es el Día de los Reyes Magos, la celebración de la Epifanía, que para mí siempre será especial porque fue en esa fecha que pisé suelo español por primera vez.  Eso fue ya hace 23 años y es una historia divertida en sí…pero para otro momento.  También sabía que el seis era el día de los tres hombres sabios porque en mi casa, siendo de tradición irlandesa-católica, mi madre siempre colocaba a los tres monarcas en nuestro belén italiano de madera tallada.  Decía algo así como “Today is the feast of the Epiphany.  That’s when the Three Wise Men came to see the baby Jesus.”  Y sanseacabó. 

            Aparte de eso, no se hacía nada fuera del ordinario sino volver a casa y estudiar porque en los States se vuelve al cole antes.   

           No debió ser así siempre.  Lo de acabar las vacaciones antes, digo.  Hay que recordar que los doce días de navidad acaban en ese día, y que la famosa Twelfth Night de Shakespeare también se refiere a la noche del 5 de enero cuando llegan los reyes magos.  Aún celebran ese día en algunas partes del mundo anglosajón, pero no tiene nada que ver con el festorro que se monta en España.   Sobre una descripción de los detalles que mis lectores fueron todos niños españoles en algún momento.  Algunos lo siguen siendo. 

            Este año no tenía muchos planes de presenciar a la cabalgata.  No como cuando salía desde el Retiro y nos venía de cine.  Entonces andábamos 5 minutitos hasta el paseo de coches mirábamos las carrozas de cerca antes de que arrancaran.  Era una experiencia muy humana y una oportunidad sin igual.  Pero luego lo pasaron todo a la Castellana, cambio que tiene sentido desde el punto de vista del espectáculo, pero a nosotros nos vinieron fatal.  Además, las niñas no están tanto por la labor de ir.  Son cosas de la edad.  

           De formas, fui con unos amigos que sí tienen niños más pequeños y vimos la cabalgata desde un despacho de mi amigo Andrés que tiene su bufete en la Castellana.  Un cuarto y, con las hojas de los árboles caídos, una vista magnífica.  Lo único inconveniente era no poder llegar a los chuches que se lanzaban, pero la verdad es que tampoco es el fin del mundo.  Habría que ver cómo se ponían algunos padres a la hora de recoger los caramelos en beneficio de sus propios hijos.  Vamos, como leones.  Así que, desde nuestro lugar alto disfrutamos mucho.

            Por la noche, tocaba a los reyes pasar por las casas. Aquí me resulta curiosa la tradición de dejar los zapatos, al igual que los holandeses.  Debe de ser una importación de época en la que España controlaba, con mucha dificultad, ese país.   No sé que opina San Nicolás, recordad que tiene un piso en la Costa Blanca, opina de la intrusión de los reyes, pero parece ser que es un hombre discreto y no demuestra ningún rencor…supongo porque es otro año…otro mes…otro día…