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Among six-year-olds, the urge to mimic famous people seems to be common, judging from anecdotal evidence consisting of a sample population of David and myself. As a youngster, David got his start by doing impressions of Gough Whitlam (former prime minister of Australia) and Harry Butler (narrator of the ABC TV series In the Wild). Wouldn't you love to have seen that?
Meanwhile, in a parallel universe, I was wasting a lot of time at recess imitating Richard Nixon and Howard Cosell. Who among us has not succumbed to the temptation to impersonate the President?
INSTRUCTIONS FOR IMITATING RICHARD NIXON FOR FIRST GRADERS
1. Shove your tongue under your lower lip. For added effect, the tongue should be a toxic shade of blue from having recently eaten a popsicle.
2. Scowl heavily. At this moment, you are not a six-year-old girl. You have jowls, heavy eyebrows, and five o'clock shadow, and you've just eradicated the gold standard.
3. Slump your shoulders. Raise both arms, make double peace signs, and growl "I am not a crook".
4. Explain who Richard Nixon is to uncomprehending classmates.
Howard Cosell was more fun to imitate, because of his robotic, nasal delivery and erudite vocabulary. It was hard to imagine a Monday Night Football broadcast without his huffing metaphors. "THIS...IS...HOWW-ID....CO-SELLLLLL," I would quack into the ear of my best friend, who hated him, while we were waiting in line for our turn at kickball. "WE...ARE...IN, THE, MIDST....OF GLAD-I-TOR-IAL COMBAT." She still hasn't forgiven me for this.
Ronald Reagan also presented an easy target, with his folksy, absent-minded ramblings and habit of starting every sentence with "Wellllllll...." Drop in a few casual references to Nancy and nuking the Russians, and Bob's your uncle.
I'm not saying these were great imitations, but it was a good alternative to dodgeball and suicide (an inexplicably popular game involving a brick wall, a tennis ball, and coming home from school with a lot of painful welts on your butt).
So, if you know any six-year-olds, encourage them to start studying the mannerisms of world leaders. You too could have a miniature Golda Meir or Helmut Kohl walking around your house, and who knows where that could lead. In my case, it seems not to have led anywhere.