Ah, Christmas in Rhode Island. Exquisitely decorated mansions in Newport. A red nose on the giant termite that sits atop a Providence exterminator’s building. And a traffic cop, doing disco and salsa moves in the middle of rush-hour traffic.
Officer
Tony Lepore is as much a holiday tradition as anything else in the
state that issued the first jail sentence for speeding 108 years ago.
Since 1984, he has entertained drivers, pedestrians and gawkers with
dance moves in downtown Providence — all while directing traffic.
He
is a Rhode Island landmark, more or less. He’s an icon, he’s like a
little mini celebrity,” says Michelle Peterson, of Warwick. She’s an
emergency medical technician and the mother of three boys who was
introduced to the “dancing cop” years ago by her partner in their
ambulance.
This year, she took her boys to see Lepore, 65, perform and got him to pose for pictures with them.
“It
feels good to see him out here; it definitely brings the holiday
spirit. I think people come out here just to see him and I think it
brings some people to shop so they can see him.”
The
routine, Lepore says, was born in the month of May of the boredom and
aggravation that officers typically experience while directing rushing
drivers and jaywalking pedestrians. He was inspired by classic “Candid
Camera” television footage he saw a day earlier that showed police
officers elsewhere directing traffic with flair.
“I
didn’t know if my bosses were going to like it, so a lot of times if I
saw a boss come down, I’d be doing my fancy stuff, then I’d go back and
do it the old-fashioned way so I don’t get caught,” Lepore says.
His
secret didn’t last long. City residents began calling the police
station and raving about Lepore’s moves. A few days later, The
Providence Journal, the state’s largest newspaper, came out with a story
on the sensation.
The
positive publicity encouraged officials to endorse the dancing cop, who
continued to perform until he left the job in 1988, when he went into
business with his brother with a food and vending service.
In
1992, Lepore says, he got a call from city officials asking him to
rejoin the force to dance and direct traffic around Christmastime as
they pushed to redefine the city’s image and bring visitors downtown.
He
signed a $1,200, 10-day contract as a reserve police officer and says
he has frozen the value of the contract at the 1992 rate to encourage
city officials to recall his services every year.
Standing
in traffic, he adjusts his cap, shakes his hip, raises and twists one
leg and spins. In one of the more unusual moves, he bends his knees,
leans far back and quickly alternates support for his body by keeping
one hand on the ground while motioning to the traffic with the free
hand.
“This
is ridiculous! Oh, man, this guy is the best,” an incredulous Vik Jay, a
medical student at Brown University, says after seeing the “Dancing
Cop” in action for the first time. “I’m from San Francisco. I used to go
to Castro Street, and this is far more entertaining than anything I saw
there.”
Karen
DeAngelis, of Pawtucket, was on a bus when she saw Lepore perform while
directing traffic. She got out to watch him before continuing her
journey.
“I
would come down here every year to see him if I were able to,” she
says. “I’m not able to, and I just so happened to be here today. He’s
that good and he’s that entertaining, and he really cheers people up.”
Lepore says his dance moves are planned to send specific directions to drivers to avoid causing confusion at the intersection.
“I
do it in such a way that even the people in the cars know what I mean,
’cause every dance move means something to the driver, and I make sure
that he knows or she knows what I want them to do,” Lepore says.
The dancing is not a distraction and has never caused incredulous drivers to crash, he says.
“I
think it would be more of a distraction if I was in a different town
and they didn’t know I was out there, but most of Providence, they even
know me by the sound of my whistle,” he said. “It’s more of a spectacle
where people love to just come down here and see me do it around
Christmastime, and they enjoy it … and I enjoy it.” [AP]
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