'It took me back to those days'

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John Mueller pays tribute to performer Buddy Holly at the Winter Dance Party, held at Celebrations 150 Friday. Holly was scheduled to perform in Spring Valley on Feb. 7, 1959, four days after he was killed in an airplane accident. (Photo contributed)

UTICA — He was almost 50 years late, but Buddy Holly finally kept his date with his fans in the Illinois Valley.

On Friday, the “Winter Dance Party” finally took place at Celebrations 150 in Utica, although 49 years and 364 days late, to the enthusiastic welcome of more than 600 fans.

Tribute performers John Mueller, who portrayed Holly, Ray Anthony as Ritchie Valens and Jay P. Richardson Jr. as J.P. “The Big Bopper” Richardson played all the crowd’s favorites, and the fact that none of them were the real thing didn’t really seem to matter.

The original trio had been scheduled to play at Spring Valley’s Les-Buzz Ballroom as part of the “Winter Dance Party” on Feb. 7, 1959. They never made it, as four days earlier, an airplane carrying the three men crashed shortly after take-off in Clear Lake, Iowa, killing all three.

On Friday, the audience was probably a little bit older than what might have greeted the three men in 1959, but the spirit had to be about the same. There were leather jackets and high school letter jackets on the dance floor, and plenty of rolled up jeans and slicked back hair in the seats. Dozens of couples continually crowded the dance floor, while many more shoulder-bopped in their seats or tapped their toes to the music.

Dick Verucchi, whose father owned the Les-Buzz, started the evening by reminiscing about the time he did meet Holly. It was 1958, and Verucchi had just turned 12 when Holly first played the Les-Buzz. Holly was changing clothes, and Verucchi had the chance to hand a cold drink to the singer. Unfortunately, it was the only change Verucchi had to meet him.

The first performer was “The Big Bopper,” who was portrayed by his son Jay, tragically born three months after his father died. Resplendent in a leopard-print smoking jacket, Richardson sang several of the audience’s favorites, including “Someone Watching Over You,” which Richardson said felt like his father wrote it just for him.

When it came time for his last number, Richardson asked the audience for suggestions, and a woman yelled “Chantilly Lace” from the back. A telephone on the stage started to ring, and Richardson picked it up, saying it was the same phone his father used for the song.

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