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In
My Father's Time
It was 1959. The National Council for The
Blind of Ireland gave my visually impaired mother a wireless. It was our
first radio. At the time my contemporaries were clued in to the highlights
of Radio Luxemburg and the Light Programme. But, always one to live in
the past, I had a preference for the folk programmes on Radio Eireann.
My adrenalin was really let loose by the prologue to one in particular,
The rick is thatched
The fields are bare,
Long nights are here again.
The year was fine
But now 'tis time
To hear the ballad-men.
Boul in, boul in and take a chair
Admission here is free,
You're welcome to the Rambling House
To meet the Seanachi. Ê
The Seanachi was, of course, Eamon Kelly.
I was to follow Eamon's stories, on the air, and later in Dublin theatres,
through his one-man shows, for decades. His trademark introduction was:
"In My Father's Time" or "Ye're glad I came." In between tales of "The
King of England's son" and "The Earl of Baanmore" he would tell his own
life-story.
And those who knew his style could always differentiate between the fact
and the fiction. He was born in Rathmore, Co. Kerry, in March 1914. In
his autobiographical work "The Apprentice" he tells of how the family
moved when he was six months old. He was brought to Carrigeen on Maurice
O'Connor's sidecar. (Of course when he'd be wearing his Seanachi's hat
he'd tell you he remembered it).
Eamon grew up in a Rambling House and in later life said:"........my ears
were forever cocked for the sound that came on the breeze. It wasn't the
Blarney Stone but my father's house which filled me with wonder".ÊÊ
He was only a child when this country gained independence but he had his
Kerry ear cocked long before that to accumulate stories such as this:
" 'Will I get in this time?' the sitting MP said once to one of our neighbours,
coming up to polling day. 'Of course you will' the neighbour told him.
'Didn't you say yourself that it was the poor put you in the last time
and aren't there twice as many poor there now?'Ê ".
Eamon didn't lick his storytelling ability off the ground. He said of
his father that he was; "....a friendly person, a good talker. Neighbours
and travelers were attracted like moths around a naked flame into his
and my mother's kitchen". Their kitchen had "....all the rude elements
of the theatre; the storyteller was there with his comic or tragic tale,
we had music, dance, song and costume".ÊÊÊ When he left school Eamon became
apprentice to his father who was a master carpenter and wheelwright.
The young apprentice missed nothing; seventy years on he could mimic a
verbose mason who described how to put a plumb-board against the rising
walls to: "ascertain their perpendicularity". He also began taking a correspondence
course with Bennett College in England. Then it turned out that the architect
of a hotel enlargement project that he was working on was the craftwork
teacher at the local Technical School. Eamon enrolled for a night course.
The teacher's name was Micheal O' Riada and, in his autobiography,Ê Eamon
told how he:"...was the means of changing the direction of my footsteps
and putting me on the first mile of a journey that would take me far from
my own parish. He taught me and others the craft of wood and in time we
passed examinations set by the technical branch of the Department of Education
in carpentry, joinery and cabinet making. He taught the theory of building
and how to read plans: he taught solid geometry which holds the key to
the angles met with in the making of a hip roof or staircase".
No matter how far from home Eamon was working he cycled two nights a week
to Tec. He was soon to learn that Micheal O'Riada's interests were not
confined to sawing and chiseling. He introduced his pupils to books, writers
and the theatre. On the head of this Eamon went to see Louis Dalton's
company, at the town hall, in "Juno and the Paycock". "It was my first
time seeing actors on a stage and the humour, the agony and the tragedy
of the play touched me to the quick". He was mesmerized by the actors
and; "...their power to draw me away from the real world and almost unhinge
my reason long after the curtain had come across".Ê
Micheal O'Riada was impressed with Eamon's reaction to the theatre. He
discussed O'Casey, Synge and Lennox Robinson with the young carpenter
and advised him if he ever went to Dublin to go to the Abbey Theatre.
Mr. O'Riada also told him that if he kept making headway in his studies
and passed the senior grade in the practical and theory papers he would
enter him for a scholarship examination, to train as a manual instructor,
in Dublin. Since Eamon had left school at fourteen he also had to do additional
study in English, Irish and Maths.
He passed his scholarship examination, and the interview in Dublin, with
flying colours. He trained and worked as a woodwork teacher for years
until he became a full time actor. His first acting role was as Christy
Mahon in "The Playboy of the Western World" along with the Listowel actress,
Maura O'Sullivan. He would later marry, and spend the rest of his life,
with Maura. They moved to Dublin and Eamon was employed by the Radio Eireann
Repertory Players and later by the Abbey Theatre Company. He drew large
audiences in villages during the '50s as he traveled around Ireland with
his stories.
He was to spend more than 40 years as a professional actor. Working with
the top actors and leading producers of his day he performed in New York,
London and Moscow.Ê Ê
As a storyteller his vivid and evocative descriptions are unsurpassed.
Whether it was about an emigrant-laden train gathering speed before fading
from view at Countess Bridge or sparks flying when the blacksmith struck
red hot iron, nobody could tell it like Eamon. Once, in the Brooklyn Academy,
while telling one of his famous stories he mentioned an Irish town and
drew a graphic word-picture of emigrants at the station. From the audience
he heard; "Divine Jesus" and a man crying. Ever the professional, Eamon
instantly changed gear, swung to comedy and in seconds had the homesick
exile laughing. Watching him on the stage, the Paps-of-Dana and Dooncorrig
Lake almost materialized around you. There was a temptation to look up
for the rising ground above Barradov Bridge.
In the Peacock Theatre in the 1980s you were standing beside the young
Eamon Kelly as he made a Tusk Tenon at the workbench beside his father
or walked barefoot on the submerged stepping-stones with his first-love,
Judy Scanlon.
As Anette Bishop described it in The Irish American Post: "It's a case
of the past returning to raise a charming blush on the cheek of the present".
Everything Eamon Kelly did was tried, tested and honed to perfection.
And he always expressed appreciation of the crafts, skills and talents
of others;"The correct actions of a craftsman sawing, planning or mortising
with the chisel were as fluid as those of an expert hurler on the playing
field". When rehearsing for Seamus Murphy's "Stone Mad", which he adapted
as a one-man show, he spent days observing stonecutters at a quarry in
the Dublin mountains. In the course of the show he "lettered" a stone
on stage.
With little or no interest in money himself he was always on the side
of the underdog and the marginalized. He was playing S.B. O' Donnell in
"Philadelphia Here I Come" on Broadway, in January 1972, when he heard
the tragic news of Bloody Sunday. There and then he decided to play his
part in trying to rectify man's inhumanity; he became a vegetarian. Eamon
was shy, by nature. And even in his eighties he would be, by far, the
most nervous artist backstage. This was because he was a perfectionist.Ê
A year before he died I saw him in a hotel about to do a piece he had
performed hundreds of times. With the utmost humility he asked a staff
member about facilities to do a last minute rehearsal: "Do you have anywhere
where I could talk to myself for a while?"
While the great storyteller won't ever again stand on a stage or sit by
the fire of a rambling house, his voice lives on. Rego Irish Records have
brought out a video "Stories of Ireland, as told by Eamon Kelly" and a
cassette "Eamon Kelly, the Irish Storyteller". You'll find Rego Records
at www.regorecords.com or
P.O. Box 1515,
Green Island,
NY 12183-0515 Ê ÊÊÊ
Finally, Kerryman, Brendan O'Shea (O'Sheas Tailoring, Lower Gardiner Street,
Dublin) told me the following story: At the end of September 2001 Eamon
Kelly brought a suit in to Brendan for some alterations. The suit was
fifteen years old. Prior to one of his trips to America, Eamon had it
made by another Dublin tailor who left the jacket minus an inside pocket
and the trousers without belt-loops or a back-pocket. Now, Eamon, the
perfectionist, asked his fellow-Kerryman to rectify the sartorial omissions,
which he did.
When Eamon died on 24th October 2001he had left detailed instructions
with his wife, Maura, about the funeral arrangements and which suit he
wanted to be laid out in. Yes, you've guessed it!
Did the man who wrote so lovingly of Con-the-tailor, who made his first
Communion suit, and who had portrayed an unforgettable tailor in "The
Tailor and Ansty" want to somehow, bring the work of a Kerry tailor out
of this world with him? I don't know. And neither does Brendan O'Shea.
As his coffin left the church the Congregation gave a round of applause.
The show was over and this time there was no encore. The final curtain
had fallen on a One-man show, performed by a man of many parts.
Actor, storyteller and writer, loving husband, devoted father and great
Kerryman. Shortly before his death while lecturing North American Literature
and Theatre students in the art of storytelling he said:
"My journeying is over. If the humour takes me, I may appear in some Alhambra,
where angels with folded wings will sit in the stalls, applaud politely
and maybe come round after and say;' that was great'Ê ".
As he walked into that great Rambling House in the sky, can't you imagine
the opening line?: "Ye're glad I came".
by
Mattie Lennon
6th January 2003
Mattie Lennon is a broadcaster,
writer and busman
who has been told he has the perfect face for radio.
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