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| IRISH MEMORIES | |
| April 7, 1997 |
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Elizabeth Farnsworth speaks with Pulitzer Prize winner Frank McCourt about his Irish childhood and his memoir, Angela's Ashes. |
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ELIZABETH FARNSWORTH: Thank you for being with us, Mr. McCourt. FRANK McCOURT, Pulitzer Prize Winner, Biography: Thank you, Elizabeth. |
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| Growing up in Limerick. | ||||||||
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ELIZABETH FARNSWORTH: Tell us about Limerick, the lane you lived in, what you had and what you didn't have there, the house you lived in.
ELIZABETH FARNSWORTH: And your downstairs was wet a good part of the time, right? FRANK McCOURT: We had two up, two down, the old houses, what they called artisans dwellings built by Queen Victoria in the old days. So there were two rooms downstairs, but when it rained, a lake formed at the end of the lane and seeped in under our door, so we--after October, we had to move upstairs. We called upstairs Italy. We went to Italy every October and came back down to Ireland in April because it was just a lake. It was a flood in the downstairs room. ELIZABETH FARNSWORTH: Your mother, Angela, of the title lived in almost a permanent state of grief, didn't she? FRANK McCOURT: Yeah. ELIZABETH FARNSWORTH: She had lost your little sister, your baby sister, Margaret, when they lived in New York. FRANK McCOURT: Yes. ELIZABETH FARNSWORTH: Before they went back to Ireland. They had emigrated to New York and then returned. And then your little brothers, your twin brothers, died too. Tell us about those deaths. Why did they--did they die partly because they were so hungry and cold all the time?
ELIZABETH FARNSWORTH: Your father, as you said, drank, did not support the family. Instead of telling us about him, read us something about him. FRANK McCOURT: Okay. "I think my father is like the Holy Trinity with three people in him: the one in the morning with the paper, one at night with the stories and the prayers, and then the one who does the bad thing and comes home with the smell of whiskey and wants us to die for Ireland. I feel sad over the bad thing but I can't back away from him because the one in the morning is my real father. And if I were in America, I could say, ‘I love you, Dad,' the way they do in the films. But you can't say that in Limerick for fear you might be laughed at. You're allowed to say you love God and babies and horses that win. But anything else is a softness in the head." |
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| Finding a voice. | ||||||||
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FRANK McCOURT: I think it was a matter of comfort. The first twenty pages or so are written in the past tense in the ordinary standard English, but then one day I just wrote the sentence. "I'm in a playground in Kassen Avenue in Brooklyn. I am three and my brother, Menachie, is two. We're on a seesaw. Up down, up down." I wrote in the present tense, and I wrote as a child and felt very comfortable. And I was on my way after that. I went right through from three to nineteen in that mode. ELIZABETH FARNSWORTH: You must have been very angry for quite a while after this experience, losing so many members of your family, you being humiliated over and over again. Were you angry?
ELIZABETH FARNSWORTH: How do you think you escaped? How do you think you managed to get out? FRANK McCOURT: I always wanted to get out, and since I knew I was born in Brooklyn and my mother always said, we'll all go back to America some day. That was our dream. And our window on the world was the Lyric Cinema in Limerick, where we'd go over on a Saturday afternoon to see Fred dancing and Cagney--Cagney going to jail into the electric--the execution chamber. So we knew we were going to get out. That was our dream. ELIZABETH FARNSWORTH: You've sold the paperback rights for $1 million. How does it feel to be rich now, after so much poverty? FRANK McCOURT: How does it feel? I feel very nervous to have to write another book. Kind of an addiction, that book two is a continuation of book one. All the money in the world won't help me to write that book.
FRANK McCOURT: And what a fool I was, how damaged I was by my childhood because I knew nothing. I knew nothing about women, sex. I didn't know anything about civilized behavior. I barely knew the difference between a knife and a fork. When I went into an automat--those Horn and Harder automats--I walked in my first time, and they had a steam table, and I said, I'll have one of those. The lady says, "What?". I said, "One of those sausages." She said, "Oh, yeah, hot dog. Well, what do you want on it?". I said, "Some of that." "Gravy?" "Yeah." She thought that was very amusing, and everybody at the steam table laughed. So I was embarrassed. And this is how I picked my way through American civilization. ELIZABETH FARNSWORTH: Well, good luck with your next book. And Frank McCourt, thanks for being with us. FRANK McCOURT: Thank you, Elizabeth. Thank you very much.
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