Chicago Tribune (Sunday)

Folk duo inspires old friends to travel world

Simon & Garfunkel song sparked pals’ ritual of ‘benching’

- By Jon Bream

MINNEAPOLI­S —

It was Larry Bans’ and Tom Edelstein’s first day of seventh grade, and the outgoing Edelstein turned around to introduce himself to Bans at the morning assembly at Highland Park Junior High School in St. Paul.

“I know who you are,” Bans whined, having done his intel.

It turns out that they were trying to date the same girl.

Neither ended up with the girl, but Bans and Edelstein ended up as best friends.

The kind who painted houses together in high school. The kind who roomed together at the University of Minnesota. The kind who vacation together even though they live 1,600 miles apart.

To celebrate their long friendship, Bans, a urologist in Scottsdale, Arizona, and Edelstein, a Realtor in St. Paul, have tried to live out their “big song” from high school — “Old Friends” by Simon & Garfunkel from 1968.

“Old friends, old friends/ Sat on their park bench like bookends”

It started 10 years ago when Edelstein had heart surgery. “I was blue and sentimenta­l,” he remembered. “And I said, ‘Here we are turning 60, we gotta start doing something.’ ”

So, the old friends — whose birthdays are four days apart — took a trip together, and, as a nod to Simon & Garfunkel, they were photograph­ed sitting on a park bench. In this case, it was a piece of wood over the headwaters of the Mississipp­i River in Itasca State Park in Minnesota.

They’ve been “benching”

every year since, save for one year of the pandemic and another when Edelstein injured his foot the day before the scheduled trip.

They’ve been to the Grand Canyon, the Blue Ridge Mountains and the fjords of Norway, among other spots, in search of the right bench.

They take turns picking the destinatio­ns, the friends explained last month at Edelstein’s realty office.

“He likes more exotic travels,” Edelstein said of Bans. “And he’s really

a big-time hiker. Nature really speaks to him.”

The buddies document their sightseein­g-oriented bench trips with lots of photos. Each journey is commemorat­ed in a hardcover book, which have ranged from 34 to 92 pages.

Their bench photos are not selfies. The ever-smiling pals ask strangers to snap the pictures.

“We walked into this art gallery in Santa Fe and there was a bench that was Native American, and it occupied the entire length of the studio,” Bans said.

“We explained the whole thing to the guy who owns the studio, and he takes the panoramic (photo). That bench had to be 15 to 18 feet and it kind of curved around. I was there a year later. The bench sold.”

On their trip to Zion National Park, a guide helped search for an ideal photo op. “This kid gets us to this rock in the waters of the Narrows,” Bans remembered. “And he’s in the water literally taking our picture and he says, ‘This is so unique. I’ve never been on a bench trip.’ ”

The benches vary as much as the locales, from a wagon-wheel seat outside a restaurant in Jackson Hole, Wyoming, to a natural resting place dubbed Clam Rock in White Pocket, Utah.

Not all the duo’s trips are about pursuing the perfect place to park their derrieres. They’ve traveled to destinatio­ns including New Zealand, Banff and Patagonia, with side excursions to Buenos Aires, the Straits of Magellan and Cape Horn.

They also occasional­ly rendezvous for concerts in the States — Bruce Springstee­n, Barbra Streisand, Chicago, Alabama and the Righteous Brothers, to name a few.

But the friends have never gone together to see Paul Simon or Art Garfunkel, who were coincident­ally pals since grade school. Opportunit­ies to see them perform are limited since Simon retired from touring in 2018, and this summer Garfunkel canceled a European tour because of COVID-19 concerns.

This month, Bans and Edelstein have a bench trip planned to New York City. They want life to imitate Simon & Garfunkel’s art:

“Can you imagine us years from today/ Sharing a park bench quietly?/ How terribly strange to be 70/ Old friends, memory brushes the same years/ Silently sharing the same fears.”

Both of them will turn 70 in late August. This time, they will be joined by Edelstein’s wife, Randy, and Bans’ partner, Debra Revzen, who produces the annual bench books. They’ve got tickets to the Michael Jackson Broadway show, and reservatio­ns at some choice restaurant­s. But they haven’t picked out an all-important bench.

They are contemplat­ing a few spots. Central Park at 70th Street. Or by the 59th Street Bridge, in honor of Simon & Garfunkel’s “The 59th Street Bridge Song (Feelin’ Groovy).” Or across the street from Simon’s longtime Manhattan apartment. They’d like his advice.

“We’re going to ask Paul Simon which bench and see what he thinks,” Bans said with chutzpah and a prayer. “We want him to understand how influentia­l his lyrics have been for us for many, many years.”

And to see if maybe, just maybe, he’ll snap the photograph of these two old friends on a park bench.

 ?? JON BREAM/MINNEAPOLI­S STAR TRIBUNE ?? Tom Edelstein and Larry Bans sit outside Highland Park Junior High School in St. Paul, Minnesota, where they met in 1964. The close friends celebrate their friendship by traveling worldwide to sit on benches.
JON BREAM/MINNEAPOLI­S STAR TRIBUNE Tom Edelstein and Larry Bans sit outside Highland Park Junior High School in St. Paul, Minnesota, where they met in 1964. The close friends celebrate their friendship by traveling worldwide to sit on benches.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States