HomeMy WebLinkAboutSefcik Halllittle time zone'
For many, Sefcik Hall in Seaton
wins home to music and memories
CLAY COPPEDGE
zple Daily Telegram
SEATON - Sefcik Hall
isn't changed much since
~m Sefcik built it in 1923.
fie downstairs tavern floor
the same one he built. The
~wnstairs bar is the same
slid 20-foot mahogany bar
originally installed.
Behind the bar is a long
Mirror decorated with neon
gns advertising Pearl beer,
fie only beer Sefcik would
~rve.
"You can have any beer
~u want, as long as it's
earl," he used to tell his
This was the same man
who, when asked by an
optometrist if he could read
the last line on the eye chart
labycakes. "They were the
first band I remember playing
sere that had that real long
lair," she says.
The Downbeats, a 1950s rock
n' roll band, staged a 50th
~eunion concert at Sefcik Hall
n April. Big Jim Lawrence,
he band's bass player, said
hey chose Sefcik because the
sand was closely associated
Kith the dance hall.
"Our crowds at Tom's were
Iuite a mix -very young peo-
~le in their early teens, high
school kids and some in their
early 20s," Lawrence says.
"One of the things that was
xid, as I found out later, was
that these kids were from all
around. They came from Tem-
ple, Cameron, Lott, Rosebud,
Rogers and all the little com-
munities in the area.
"Another thing about Tom's
that I'll always remember was
that I never saw a fight there.
Not one."
A local musician, David
Zychek, staged a series of wild-
ly popular Christmas night
shows, which he recently res-
mother's maiden name!"
Tom~Sefcik's daughter,
Alice Sulak, has owned and
operated Sefcik Hall since
1970, a year before her father
died. Despite appearances,
there have been some
changes at the old dance
hall. The solid oak dance
floor upstairs was redone in
1953. Air conditioning was
installed in the early 1980s.
Other than that, the revered
old dance hall is pretty
much the same as it ever
was.
Sulak, 74, was born in and
still lives in the house next
door to the hall. Not only
does she run a dance hall
that was recognized in 1995
as a Pioneer Dance Hall by
the Country Music Hall of
Fame, but she still plays a
pretty mean saxophone.
Polka bands were the first
to play at Sefcik Hall, but
country musicians began
hitting the Sefcik bandstand
as polka's popularity faded,
even in the Czech communi-
ties like Seaton, where it
was nurtured. The first
songs Sulak learned were
sung exclusively in Czech.
She still speaks with a lilt-
ing Czech accent.
times a year. Sulak enjoys the ~'. -'
national acts, but the bands
she mentions are bands like `'
Happy Dan and the Melody
Boys from Granger and the
Kouhouks Band from West.
Then there were Gene Mor- '.
gan and the Belltones, Roy
Robinson and the Availables, ':~
CJ and the Jewels, Marvin
Gruene and the Casuals, the
Patek Orchestra from Shiner,:
the Vrazel Polka Band, the
Divis Band and the Gentrys.
"There's many more," she
said. "So many good bands."
Music and laughter still
abound at Sefcik Hall, whether
it's at a weekend dance or a
weekday evening, when the
regulars stop by for a cold one
on their way home. Birthday
parties and weddings dot the
hall's social calendar.
"A lot of people met here
and got married," Sulak says.
"A lot of those people still
come here, only now they
bring their kids with them. ~'
This is more of a family-type
place. Kids have a good time
here. It's not aclub-like deal."
That's the way it's been here
for more than 80 years,
through drought and flood, the
Depression, World War II, the
McCarthy Era, the Beatles,
recessions, booms, busts, scan-
dals and 14 U.S. presidents.
For Sulak, as it was for her
"We used to get 700 people
here for those dances," Sulak
recalls. "Those are some of the
biggest dances l remember."
Zychek, recalling the first
time he saw Sefcik Hall, said,
"It was like stepping back into
a little time zone."
These days, Brave Combo, a
two-time Grammy winning
polka-influenced band, plays at
Qnfrilr at lnact a rn77nlP of
father, the job has been its own
reward.
"I don't make that much
money here, but you have to
enjoy what you do," she says.
"I sure ain't getting rich, not
by far. I love to see all the peo-
ple come here. I love to see
them enjoy themselves. I
appreciate everyone who
comes here, and I hope they all
rnmP hack."
"You have got to change ~.
with the times if you are
going to be successful," she :`
says. "People around here ``
started liking country
music, so that's what we
played."
The first rock group Sulak
remembers playing at the
hall was an Austin band, the
AP photo/Andrew Nenque/Temple Daily Telegram
Alice Sulak inherited Sefcik Hall in 1970 from her father, Tom Sef-
cik, and helped keep the small town dance hall alive for more than
82 years. "1 love to see atl the people come here," she said.