Teresa Alfeld thus far has three documentaries about Vancouver figures under her belt, including a feature on socialist lawyer and mayoral candidate Harry Rankin, a short on anti-poverty activist and politician Jean Swanson, and - premiering at DOXA on May 15th - on Doug and the Slugs, Doug and the Slugs and Me.
But Alfeld did not actually envision herself, early on, as becoming a documentary filmmaker, she explains on a Zoom call.
“My interest in film school was always in narrative, but I
was curious about documentary, and it just so happened that a proposal I’d
written many years ago about Harry Rankin to the BC Arts Council for a film was
one of my first successful funding applications. I always say I fell into
documentary.”
You’d never know it. I’ve only previewed three documentaries for DOXA, but Alfeld’s film, Doug and the Slugs and Me, is by far my favourite (best music doc I've seen since Sparks? Probably). Of course, I’ve been listening to Doug and the Slugs since age 12, when I first noticed Cognac & Balogna on the shelf at a Maple Ridge Pay & Save, shortly after its release (I recall being intrigued by the album cover and title from the gitgo). And as an adult, I saw Doug and the Slugs live three times (twice with Doug and no original Slugs, and once with all the original Slugs but no Doug). I interviewed Simon Kendall about one of the band’s post-Doug concerts and got my albums signed backstage at that show by all the members of the band save, obviously, Doug (though I did get his autograph on a 7" I purchased at Neptoon Records, itself a location for some of Alfeld's interviews). I once even had a weird moment with Doug Bennett in a Maple Ridge men’s room, close to the end of his life (I detail the encounter in my obituary from when Bennett passed, at the tragically young age of 52, in 2004, but it's nowhere near the sort of weird men's room moment that Rob Halford describes in Confess, so don't get your hopes up!).
With that much history with the band, I was predisposed to either
love Alfeld’s film, or to find fault with it if she got things wrong. Happy to
report that she knocks it out of the park, with tons of stuff I didn’t expect
(like Terry David Mulligan having exactly the same assessment of Music for the Hard of Thinking
that I do) to Doug himself being tormented, in his journals, by the compromises
that began with that record, as the band struggled to break into America and get onto the radio again. There's tons of footage I had not seen, including snippets of the musical Bennett performed in, John Gray's Rock and Roll. Even more surprisingly, there’s also ample music that
I flat out did not know about, from the Slugs-without-a-Doug 7” (“Running
Around”) to the country album Bennett demo’d, songs from which ended up the
Tomcat Records CD Fallen Angel, by Suzanne Gitzi.
It takes some doing to school me in Doug and the Slugs, but Alfeld makes it look easy.
So is Alfeld seeing this as her area, now – to make films about under-sung Vancouver characters? It’s certainly fertile ground, she agrees. “There’s just so many around us, and they never get their due, especially on the national stage. And so it’s been really fun to get to know all these interesting Vancouverites; I’m certainly starting to see common themes that unite people from the west coast.”
As Alfeld and I discuss in our feature interview for Montecristo, Alfeld – who grew up next to the Bennetts and was friends with
Shea Bennett, one of Doug’s daughters – had intended to tell the band’s story
“with the usual suspects of archival performances and archival photos.” That
was until Bennett’s widow, Nancy Hare, entrusted her with a cache of home
movies. She also gave the filmmaker access to Bennett’s journals, which span
the 1980’s. Both developments are discussed at length in the Montecristo
interview, and considerably enrich the documentary.
The journals more or less span the first ten years of Doug and the Slugs existence, but come to an end in 1989. Does Alfeld know why Bennett
stopped journaling?
“I have no clear answer,” Alfeld responds. “The family
didn’t say that ‘Doug pronounced in 1989 that he was done writing.’ Or, John [Burton, Slugs’ guitarist] or Simon [Kendall, keyboard player] didn’t tell
me that Doug had decided to stop writing. They really just peter off. One of
the final entries is specifically about Christmas – about how Christmas had
been for the family, and how he’d bought some nice new leather pants for Nancy.
And then they just end, and I’m left to come to my own conclusions, and the
ones that I’ve come to are that the journaling processes – what Doug calls his ‘science
project’ – were done with an inkling that the band was about to take off, and
by 1989, it was clear to everyone that Doug and the Slugs weren’t going to
make in the States, they weren’t going to have that big breakthrough; they
would obviously still have a wonderful career into the 1990’s, but Doug and the Slugs were not going to be his main drive anymore. My sense was that he’d
become so much more domestic, a family man, and that he didn’t feel right to
continue the journals. “
One aspect of Doug and the Slugs not really covered in the
film is Bennett's propensity for teasing and torturing audiences. I remember a
Facebook friend – sadly, I’ve forgotten who – who reported seeing Doug and the Slugs as a child, and was standing right up at the front, when Doug, seeing
the kid had suspenders on (or some other elasticky thing; the deets of the
story have faded since I was told it), reached down into the audience, pulled
the suspenders (or whatever it was) out from the kid, and then snapped them back, causing
a fair bit of pain – which Bennett chuckled merrily at, leaving my Facebook
friend fuming that the singer was “a prick” (I believe that was the term the guy used – he was still
mad about the episode years later!).
I never saw anything like that – but I did witness, both times I caught him, Doug speculating which female patrons of bars he was playing
in were wearing “falsies;” him teasing audience members that men with hats in
bars are invariably bald underneath them. And there are other stories out there: Simon Kendall, in the above-linked Straight interview, relays one of Doug venturing
into the audience while the band vamped behind him so he could, on-mike, poke fun at the contents of an older woman’s purse that he set to rummaging through.
So did Alfeld find footage of things like that, and leave it out of the film –
fearing, perhaps, that it would lose audience sympathies for Bennett?
Not so much. Alfeld never saw anything on the level of aggression as the suspenders-snap story, and as for any off-colour moments in performance footage, “the honest answer is, I didn’t encounter anything that made me really uncomfortable, that I felt like I needed to hide. Moreso there was just obviously evidence in Doug’s final years that his health was declining, in performance footage that I didn’t think needed to be out there.”
As for teasing audiences, “I certainly heard stories, too. I think that Doug
was always walking a line. But I find that interesting and exciting. I haven’t
been privy to anything that crossed a line or made me uncomfortable.”
The film has some very fun footage – especially the stuff at
Grandview Lanes, more on which in Montecristo – of Alfeld spending time with the Bennett’s as a child. And she was clearly at one of the Ted Okos-fronted, post-Doug gigs at the Commodore, because there's footage from it in the film (I strained, but couldn't spot myself). But it is unclear
if she ever saw Doug himself perform live...?
“I have a very faint recollection of seeing him perform one time at the PNE in Vancouver," Alfeld says. "According to my parents, I would have been five or six, very young. I don’t really remember the show; what I remember was that Shea and I were up at the front of the stage, dancing our little five-year-old asses off, and thinking that we were amazing. That’s what I remember thinking: ‘Wow, we’re the best dancers, how are people even going to pay attention to this band?’”
There will be both streamed and theatrical presentations of Doug and the Slugs and Me starting May 14th, with Alfeld and various Slugs on hand for all three theatrical showings. See the DOXA website (and my Montecristo story!) for more.
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