As Laura Petrie, stay-at-home TV mom,
 wife to Dick Van Dyke, Mary Tyler Moore
 refused to wear dressy skirts,
 frou-frou heels, or pearls. Laura wore pants,
 specifically capris because, Women don't wear
 full-skirted dresses to vacuum in.
Studio heads wrung their hands. She looked good.
 She looked so good they were afraid. Afraid
 housewives would be angry that Laura and/or
 Mary looked too good in pants. Sponsors were concerned
 about the fit of her pants, using the term, cupping under
 which Mary Tyler Moore assumed meant,
 My, you know, my seat –
That there was a little too much definition.
 They tried to limit the cupping under
 as much as possible. Mary Tyler Moore, aka Laura,
 was not allowed to wear pants in more than one scene.
 Three episodes it lasted until they grew lazy
 and forgetful. There were no riots,
there was definitely cupping under.
 Suits nodded their balding heads.
 She got absolution from men everywhere.
 Women breathed a sigh of relief too:
 that's what they wore at home. We all vacuum
 in pants now, and then.
 And then, and now
 our pert bottoms sway in unison, pants
 cupping under and everyone watching.

Today's poem is from Victoria Kennefick's debut collection Eat or We Both Starve (Carcanet). Further information on victoriakennefick.com















