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J.P. Donleavy was once asked why he was growing a beard. His answer was, "I'm not doing anything. You're shaving." |
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| Photo by Derek Speirs. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
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| JPD
at the gates to Levington Park. Photo by Derek Speirs. |
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| The following article first appeared in The New York Times, February 11, 2006. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
"J.P.
Donleavy Approaches 80 Anything But Gingerly"
By his own admission,
he ventures through the rusting gates at the edge of the property only once
or twice a month. After more than 30 years here, he has never met his neighbors
and does not want to. Now, two months before his 80th birthday, Mr. Donleavy is back in the limelight. After several abortive efforts, a promising attempt is under way to make a film version of "The Ginger Man," starring Johnny Depp and directed by Laurence Dunmore, who recently worked with Mr. Depp on "The Libertine." Mr. Donleavy is in negotiations to sell his papers — described as one of the most comprehensive archives in contemporary letters — to a university. And the New York-born author, who trained as a painter before he began writing, just unveiled a 60-year retrospective of his artwork at a Dublin gallery. "This is a kind of
rough period," he said with a smile, surveying the grounds around Levington
House during an interview this week. "I'm always trying to hide. I don't
go out in the world, I'm never seen." Despite his claims to
be an ascetic outsider, Mr. Donleavy enthusiastically welcomes visitors and
relishes the chance to regale them with stories about his past. He carries
himself with a youthful energy and says he is "embarrassed" about
becoming an octogenarian because people will expect him to shuffle along with
a hunched back. Instead, he jumps out of his armchair to demonstrate that
he can kick his legs into a near-vertical split and throw lightning-quick
punches (seven in one second, he said). That animated joie de vivre attracted a crowd of young admirers, including local rock stars and society personalities, who surrounded him on Wednesday night at the opening of his exhibition at the Molesworth Gallery. Only some watercolors and sketches were priced at less than 1,000 euros ($1,200). Irish newspapers fawned over the exhibition; The Irish Independent said it was full of "talented irreverence, sparkling caricature." But the film, if it gets made, is most likely to catapult Mr. Donleavy back into the public eye. Passers-by stop him in Dublin to say hello, thanks to recent magazine photographs of him and Mr. Depp taken in New York last year, at a party to mark the 50th anniversary of "The Ginger Man." "Show business is old hat to me — you could even call me a star maker," he said, listing some of the actresses who had starred in his plays. He expressed high hopes about the cinematic potential of his most famous work. "No one who has ever been to Hollywood, has ever lived there, had anything to do with Hollywood, hasn't thought of making 'The Ginger Man,' " he said. The novel, which details
the drunken exploits of a rowdy young American studying at Dublin's Trinity
College after World War II, certainly has a loyal following. "The Ginger
Man" was reprinted in its first Irish-only edition last year, and has
sold more than 45 million copies in two dozen languages. The author also aims to keep his fame alive by selling his letters, which were recently inventoried by his archivist, Bill Dunn, a former newspaper reporter and fan of Mr. Donleavy's who asked to take on the job. The collection, which is currently housed in dozens of filing boxes across the floor of Mr. Donleavy's study in Mullingar, encompasses all aspects of his career, including lengthy court proceedings and correspondence with figures like Robert Redford and Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis. "We put a value on it some time ago, of $7 million or $8 million, which one thought was pretty modest," Mr. Donleavy said. He cited the manuscript for Jack Kerouac's "On the Road," which sold for $2.43 million in 2001, as a precedent. "What's particularly interesting is that Donleavy kept everything intact," said Robert K. O'Neill of the Burns Library at Boston College, which expressed an interest in the papers but balked at the price. "You seldom come across a collection that is as complete as his." Mr. Donleavy keeps adding
to it. He is currently "desperately trying to complete" one of several
short fables about a quirky happening in New York — in this case, a
dog jumping out of a 17th-floor window. |
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To purchase books by J.P. Donleavy, go to the Buyers' Guide. |
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