Mr. Smith’s Funhouse

Evan Smith does a skateboard trick on steps underneath the Bloomfield Bridge. (Andrew Rush/Post-Gazette)

How Pittsburgh shaped one of skateboarding’s biggest stars

Evan Smith parks his car underneath the Bloomfield Bridge, on a slice of asphalt between a basketball court and a baseball field. His gray Honda CR-V seems more fitting for harried parents than a 26-year-old dude known as skateboarding’s psychedelic scarecrow.

For Smith, a professional skateboarder, anything can become his next element: a handrail, a wall, a staircase or, indeed, an SUV. With the trunk open, Smith kicks his skateboard into the air, slides along the top of the bumper and sticks the landing.

When he’s on the road, as he is most of the year, Smith is shooting skateboarding videos in Barcelona, touring Australia with his sponsors and, on occasion, getting arrested, most memorably in Hong Kong.

Evan Smith underneath the Bloomfield Bridge. (Andrew Rush/Post-Gazette)

When he’s home in Pittsburgh, Smith spends his days at Constellation Coffee in Lawrenceville, skates in Polish Hill and Downtown, plays golf at Pittsburgh National and watches open mics at Mr. Smalls, the Millvale music venue where he lives with his aunt and uncle.

Ranking skateboarders is subjective and, in Smith’s view, against the spirit of skating, which he views as an art form. Still, it is inarguable that Smith, from his perch at Mr. Smalls, has carved out a spot atop the skating world. Thrasher Magazine, the industry’s leading publication, has described him as “one of the most gifted skaters ever,” and he was a finalist for Thrasher’s 2016 Skater of the Year. He has major sponsorships from Element and DC Shoes, his own line of sneakers and 104,000 followers on Instagram.

Smith’s local profile may be relatively low-key compared with Pittsburgh’s other star athletes, but his skating videos, called “parts,” make waves in the industry. Speed, air, creativity, a willingness to try anything: These are the hallmarks of Smith’s style. In a recent release, he skated toward a large window, launched into the air, flipped his board, mashed it against the window, slid down a few yards and landed, cat-like, on his feet.

When it comes to skateboarding, Pittsburgh doesn’t have the reputation of Los Angeles or Barcelona, cities known for their smooth surfaces and big skating scenes. But as a teenager on his way to stardom, Smith moved here from Florida, and he hasn’t looked back.

In Pittsburgh, he’s rebuilt a skatepark, renovated a music venue, joined a family band and made his home. He could do the skating everywhere else.

“That move was probably the most crucial move of my entire career and my development as a man,” he said.

(Andrew Rush/Post-Gazette)

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(Andrew Rush/Post-Gazette)

In Smith’s view, half of skateboarding is muscle memory.

“The other half is unchartered territory,” he said.

At 6-foot-2, Smith, who grew up near Orlando, is tall for a skateboarder, and one gets the sense he could eat whatever he wants and not gain a pound. His clothes fit loosely over his frame, and his shoulder-length hair, parted down the middle, becomes increasingly curly at the ends. Blue-green tints recently lingered in his locks, a relic of dyeing a section in rainbow colors after the Pulse nightclub shooting last year.

“I want to defy what is possible...every, like, athletic composer would want to defy gravity if they could, too.”

Smith can sometimes fulfill the skaterboarder stereotypes: He peppers his phrases with words like “far-out” and “sick,” he appreciates a hard fall as much as a landed trick, and he smokes pot. While he relates to the lost boys and punks he says skateboarding attracts, he also has a disarming air of optimism.

“I want to defy what is possible,” he said. “Every, like, athletic composer would want to defy gravity if they could, too.”

As a kid, Smith was bored in school and turned to petty crimes: stealing food, dealing and doing drugs, drinking. He thinks skating saved him.

“It gave me purpose,” Smith said. “I saw that it’s something you can practice and work at, and that was a lesson I needed to know at the time.”

His uncle, Mike Speranzo, a former skateboarder who now runs Mr. Smalls with his wife, Liz Berlin, gave him his first skateboard. Growing up, Smith would visit Pittsburgh in the summer, staying with Speranzo and Berlin, a member of the band Rusted Root, and honing his skating skills. When Smith’s mother — Speranzo’s sister — was going through some personal issues, the couple talked about taking in Smith full-time.

Evan Smith with his uncle, Mike Speranzo, owner of Mr. Smalls Theatre, outside the venue. (Andrew Rush/Post-Gazette)

“When I came to help her deal with stuff, I saw the condition that Evan was living in,” Speranzo said. “And it wasn’t bad, it was just, it was lonely. It was a lonely condition for a young boy. And I didn’t want that to scar him, you know, so I was just like, ‘Let’s go not be lonely. Jump in the car. We’ll go do things.’ ”

Smith, a teenager at the time, ran to his room and packed his bag. He was now a Pittsburgher.

“I didn’t have to, like, fend for myself anymore out on the ‘Lord of the Flies’ thing. I had family that was on that wavelength,” Smith said. “Of course, mom and dad always … but [in Pittsburgh], I was constantly being surrounded by people that were like, ‘Yeah, I can do whatever the f— I want.’ ”

(Andrew Rush/Post-Gazette)

Evan Smith rides down the street by Mr. Smalls Theatre in Millvale, as seen from a hill in Reserve.
(Andrew Rush/Post-Gazette)

Smith’s amateur skating career was on the rise when he moved to Pittsburgh, and he never attended school here. Instead, he helped rebuild the now-defunct Mr. Smalls Skatepark and worked on projects at the music venue; the family eventually converted a schoolhouse on site into apartments, where they now live. But he already was spending time on the road and skating at a high level.

“It wasn’t like, ‘Oh, we’re adopting our nephew, we better put him in school,’” Berlin said. “It was like, ‘Oh, we’re adopting our nephew, let’s manage his career and look out for his best interests.’”

Like Smith, Speranzo grew up in Florida, dropped out of school and said skateboarding protected him from bad influences.

Mike Speranzo was the first director of the skateboard program at Camp Woodward in Centre County. Courtesy: Mike Speranzo

And like Smith, Speranzo found success, albeit in the world of vert skateboarding — riding on half-pipes and ramps — rather than street skating. He lived with Mark Gonzales, by one ranking the most influential skateboarder of all time, in a California houseboat. He hung out with Tony Hawk, the most famous skater of all time, on tour; they were both too young to go to bars.

“It wasn’t what it is now, then,” Speranzo said. “We were obscure people that had a little clique, and that was it. And I was just a young kid that could fly.”

Unlike Smith, however, Speranzo never technically went pro. Instead, he started the skateboarding program at Camp Woodward, a summer camp in Centre County.

“I was struggling with personal identity issues and I realized that being there for those kids and that camp was way more satisfying than continuing to pursue my career,” he said.

Speranzo got his GED, enrolled in a continuing education program at Penn State and played in a band. That’s how he met Berlin, who grew up in Pittsburgh and whose celebrity was rising with Rusted Root. As the band’s popularity increased, she was getting hit on a lot, and she had her walls up.

“And then she saw me skateboarding,” Speranzo said, “and I was in.”

Courtesy: Mike Speranzo

When Berlin became pregnant with their son, Jordan, now a music student at Carnegie Mellon, Speranzo stopped skating.

“He basically quit everything and followed me, followed our tour bus in a car from town to town to take care of me and help me be pregnant and still perform,” Berlin said. She paused, adding, “Permanent brownie points.”

Speranzo left the tour and worked on the couple’s company in Pittsburgh. Jordan, courtesy of Speranzo’s friends — who were known as Mr. Handler, Mr. Fuzzy Head and Mr. Freaky Big — got his own nickname: Mr. Smalls. The new family business had a name.

Years later, Speranzo briefly returned to competition. After a few months of training, he competed in a contest in Tampa, Fla., but took a bad spill on a ramp, dislocating his shoulder and breaking his collarbone. He popped the shoulder back into its socket and finished the contest.

That was the first time Smith saw his uncle skate.

“I was just like, what? Jedi warrior,” Smith said, laughing. “Masterful.”

The next week, Speranzo placed fifth in the world as an amateur. His collarbone was still broken.

Evan Smith under the Bloomfield Bridge. (Andrew Rush/Post-Gazette)

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(Andrew Rush/Post-Gazette)

Shortly after Smith and Speranzo rebuilt the skatepark, they had to dismantle it; the borough of Millvale wanted the space back, and they were left with tens of thousands of dollars of pressure-treated wood on their hands.

Rather than let the lumber go to waste, they used it to expand Mr. Smalls, turning the skatepark parts into a restaurant and bar area called the Funhouse.

“When you’re at Mr. Smalls and you’re ordering food, you’ll see these pillars that are curved,” Smith said. “Those are the ramps we learned 540s on.”

360° View: Evan Smith performs skateboarding tricks over a 360° camera. (Andrew Rush/Post-Gazette)

So skateboarding is in the bones of Mr. Smalls, and Mr. Smalls is in Smith’s bones, too. His sister, Shaunden, works at the venue, as do several members of Berlin’s family. Smith plays music with his aunt and uncle in a band called the Drowning Clowns, and the venue’s open mics are in his living room.

“Everything that we built, it’s just been on the steps of not losing what we had,” Speranzo said. “My skateboarding history came with me. It involved Evan. Evan is now making skateboarding history. It involves me. Smalls was a byproduct of us starting our family together. It follows us.”

Smith wrote song lyrics on his skateboard because he didn't have any paper around. (Andrew Rush/Post-Gazette)

Evan Smith underneath the Bloomfield Bridge. (Andrew Rush/Post-Gazette)

Back at the Bloomfield parking lot, Smith soars off a set of concrete stairs and lands hard on his board, which breaks in half.

Skateboards have a short half-life: Smith wrote song lyrics on this one, he said, because he didn’t have any paper around. The art of skateboarding, too, is ephemeral. Even though Smith’s video parts are years in the making, he might nail a trick just the one time it appears on film.

Evan Smith attempts a trick inside Constellation Coffee in Lawrenceville. Courtesy: Evan Smith

In that way, the steadiness he’s found in Mr. Smalls, and in Pittsburgh, is unlike his life on four wheels.

“There’s still trees in Pittsburgh; there’s really hard-working people,” he said. “People aren’t fake here. People are right here on the ground with you, present.”

On his skateboard, Smith likes to fly high, but in Pittsburgh, he prefers to stay on the ground.


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