Always showtime for server

Career freed her to pursue love of music, theatre

Advertisement

Advertise with us

Michele Wood was a carhop in the golden age of carhops. Thirty-some years later, she tends bar and waits tables in the shabbily elegant Palm Room at the Fort Garry Hotel.

Read this article for free:

or

Already have an account? Log in here »

To continue reading, please subscribe:

Subscribe and receive a limited-edition Free Press branded hat or tote.

Digital Subscription

One year of digital access for only $205*

  • Enjoy unlimited reading on winnipegfreepress.com
  • Read the E-Edition, our digital replica newspaper
  • Access News Break, our award-winning app
  • Play interactive puzzles

*First annual payment billed as $205.00 + GST for one year. This annual subscription will automatically renew at $233.00 + GST every 52 weeks (10% off the regular annual price of $259.35). Offer available to new and qualified returning subscribers only. Cancel any time.

To continue reading, please subscribe:

Add Free Press access to your Brandon Sun subscription for only an additional

$1 for the first 4 weeks*

  • Enjoy unlimited reading on winnipegfreepress.com
  • Read the E-Edition, our digital replica newspaper
  • Access News Break, our award-winning app
  • Play interactive puzzles
Start now

*Your next Brandon Sun subscription payment will increase by $1.00 and you will be charged $17.95 plus GST for four weeks. After four weeks, your payment will increase to $24.95 plus GST every four weeks.

Opinion

Hey there, time traveller!
This article was published 25/09/2009 (6130 days ago), so information in it may no longer be current.

Michele Wood was a carhop in the golden age of carhops. Thirty-some years later, she tends bar and waits tables in the shabbily elegant Palm Room at the Fort Garry Hotel.

Sometimes she wonders how she ended up where she did.

"I recently realized, ‘Oh my God. Pretty soon I’m going to be a 50-year-old waitress,’ " she said, sipping coffee in the hotel’s breakfast room. "How did this end up happening?"

RUTH.BONNEVILLE@FREEPRESS.MB.CA 
Michele Wood relies on her daytime bartending job at the Fort Garry Hotel for a steady income while pursuing a second career as a singer on the side.
RUTH.BONNEVILLE@FREEPRESS.MB.CA Michele Wood relies on her daytime bartending job at the Fort Garry Hotel for a steady income while pursuing a second career as a singer on the side.

She was 14 when she started running trays of Teen Burgers and frosty mugs of root beer out to waiting cars.

The teenager loved the job.

"It was fun. When you’re 14 and you’re staying up until one or two in the morning, it’s great. My parents finally made me quit because there were too many late nights in a row."

But Wood realized the service industry suited her. She loved music and theatre. Her flexible shifts at places like Branigan’s and Knickers gave her time to audition and perform.

"Oh, I did Rainbow Stage and Gilbert and Sullivan and The Hollow Mug," she says. Her big bright eyes and pixie haircut reveal the ingenue she once was. Waitressing was a way to lead the life she really wanted.

"The Hollow Mug was so much fun. I loved it, loved it, loved it!"

Wood was young, a pretty soprano with a personality bigger than life. The audiences adored her and she adored them right back. The future wasn’t nearly as important as the next song.

She describes herself as a "former Wolseley hippie girl," one who spent 10 aimless years taking university courses.

"I believed in learning for the sake of learning," she laughs. "This was higher education. I didn’t want to think about a career."

Eventually she earned her arts degree.

Wood tried going straight.

"I did work two years in a bank to get the feeling of a real job," she says. "I just remember being really bored."

The waitressing jobs were always there. Wood is smart, attractive and able to handle a room filled with demanding customers.

She’s officially a bartender in the Palm Room, a job that includes getting the ice, setting up the bar and tables, cutting the fruit for drinks and ordering liquor.

Wood takes the bar and lunch orders, delivering the food and drink to the tables.

She usually works solo. Some days she has a busboy running up and down the stairs to the hotel’s basement kitchen. Sometimes she does it herself.

The bartender works straight through her seven-hour day shift without a break. The demanding lunch rush usually lasts about two-and-a-half hours.

Her schedule allows her to spend time with her 11-year-old son. She’s a single mother.

Wood’s demanding job is made more stressful by the fact that tips form a significant portion of her income. If you’re professional and read your customers right, you can earn more in tips than you do in salary, she says.

As a bartender, she makes $13.50 an hour.

"I think I’ve got a plush job in this city in terms of waitressing," she says. The uniforms are supplied and they’re classy, not sleazy. It’s a small staff and they know each other well.

"I’m always smiling. That’s the key. No matter what happens you keep your cool and you smile."

She’s philosophical.

"I always say you earn your tips for service and your salary for keeping your mouth shut."

She’s usually able to charm the customers. She has her regulars and can joke with them. But sometimes people arrive in foul moods with no interest in anything but food or drink.

"You can’t buy into that," she says. "You can’t let it affect you. I just give them prompt and efficient service. A lot of the job is being able to read people. It’s ‘Good morning, good afternoon.’ It’s more formal with some people."

Like most waitresses, she has horror stories to tell. The only ones she’ll share (see "keeping your mouth shut," above) are her own flubs.

"There was a table in the middle of the room. A guest had left his suitcase sticking out. When you’re carrying those big trays you can’t see your feet. I tripped."

Wood stops and laughs.

"I did this wonderful balletic move. I didn’t spill a drop. I got applause for that one."

The secret to carrying heavy trays, she says, is simple. The bigger, heavier items go in the middle.

"If someone thinks they’re doing me a favour by removing something from the tray, they’re wrong. That’s the quickest way to have me drop everything."

She sees herself working indefinitely. The little bit of money she had saved vanished when the stock market tanked.

"I hope my feet hold up," she says quietly. "This job is hard on the body. At least now I’m not doing it in stilettos."

Michele Wood still performs, singing with a dance band. That’s for her. For the money, for the bills, she puts on the uniform and performs like a pro.

"I think the people who are blessed are those who know early what they want," she says. "If I could do it again, maybe I’d be doing interior design. Yeah. I wish I could have had the foresight."

The former ingenue smiles, smoothes her uniform.

There are tables to set, drinks to be made.

It’s showtime.

 

lindor.reynolds@freepress.mb.ca

Report Error Submit a Tip

More Stories

Puzzles Palace

1 minute read Updated: 1:38 PM CDT

To solve our puzzles, please subscribe with this special offer: |

Imperialist crusades: 21st-century style

John R. Wiens 5 minute read Preview

Imperialist crusades: 21st-century style

John R. Wiens 5 minute read 2:00 AM CDT

In the 11th century and lasting into the 13th, the papacy launched a series of at least eight military campaigns we now refer to as the Crusades, or Holy Wars. They were an imperialistic call to arms for Christians to retake Jerusalem, which was at the time under Muslim rule.

Spiritual rewards for participation were implied, and other incentives offered, to dull the extra taxation demanded to fund the campaigns. Over time, the “crusades” morphed to become massacres of not only Muslims but also Jews and Christian dissidents — in other words, any enemies of the papacy. If today’s news sounds like déjà vu all over again, it probably should.

The stories keep repeating themselves in many forms. We now know that two 20th century world wars, global in scope, were caused by imperialistic ambitions, changes in the balance of international powers and corresponding arms races. The first was attributed to the assassination of the heir to the Austro-Hungarian throne by a Bosnian Serb, a kind of “regime change” initiative. The second resulted from rising tensions between Allied and Axis powers, triggered by the rise of European fascism and Japanese militarism. The human toll of both was unimaginable.

In the First World War, 15 to 22 million people, including soldiers and civilians, were killed and another 23 million were wounded. These numbers do not account for those otherwise affected — victims of chemical warfare whose compromised health shortened their lives; of the subsequent Spanish flu epidemic amplified by the displacement of peoples; others who died from other diseases caused by war conditions; and those who were malnourished or starved. Nor do they account for the ongoing trauma and resentments passed on intergenerationally to this day.

Read
2:00 AM CDT

Mosquito-free summers nice while they lasted

Editorial, July 8 4 minute read Preview

Mosquito-free summers nice while they lasted

Editorial, July 8 4 minute read 7:11 AM CDT

It was nice while it lasted, wasn’t it? And it certainly seemed to last a long, lovely time. But with this spring and early summer’s unusually heavy rainfall and significant standing-water accumulation, our blissful vacation from mosquito swarming and swatting is most definitely over.

Read
7:11 AM CDT

Tragedy on two wheels: Motorbike deaths rising

Morgan Modjeski 4 minute read Preview

Tragedy on two wheels: Motorbike deaths rising

Morgan Modjeski 4 minute read 2:01 AM CDT

This year has been a tragic one for Manitoba’s motorcycle community.

The latest fatality involves a 56-year-old Steinbach woman who crashed in Whiteshell Provincial Park on Sunday, the sixth motorcycle-related death of 2026.

The woman died in hospital after she lost control while heading eastbound on Highway 44 near Provincial Road 312. RCMP said Tuesday she flipped the bike into the south ditch at about 5:30 p.m. Her identity has not been released.

RCMP said the investigation is ongoing, but preliminary findings indicate debris or gravel on a curve in the road may have been a factor.

Read
2:01 AM CDT

‘Easy decision for me:’ longtime city councillor Chambers not seeking re-election

Joyanne Pursaga 4 minute read Preview

‘Easy decision for me:’ longtime city councillor Chambers not seeking re-election

Joyanne Pursaga 4 minute read Updated: Yesterday at 5:48 PM CDT

Coun. Markus Chambers has announced will not run for a third term on city council, instead stepping away to spend more time with his family.

Read
Updated: Yesterday at 5:48 PM CDT

Transcona teen — and Nigerian royalty — earns high school diploma as queen mother beams with pride

Maggie Macintosh 7 minute read Preview

Transcona teen — and Nigerian royalty — earns high school diploma as queen mother beams with pride

Maggie Macintosh 7 minute read Monday, Jul. 6, 2026

Manitoba’s public school system is receiving high praise from a Nigerian king who sent his only son to Grade 12 in Transcona.

Prince Adetola Samuel Owoade — known as “Sam,” to friends and family — kept his royal title under wraps throughout his tenure at Transcona Collegiate.

It wasn’t until an end-of-year ceremony that many of Sam’s peers and their families learned nobility was among the Class of 2026.

His Royal Majesty, Abimbola Owoade I, was unable to vacate his throne in southwestern Nigeria for the occasion, but he made his fatherly pride known.

Read
Monday, Jul. 6, 2026