The Michigan Daily - Monday, September 27, 1999 - IA 'Ashes' gave birth to McCourt dynasty f, N f p2 X r* AP PHOTO Syed Raza, of Herndon, Va., waits in line for the movie "Baadshah." Xdian films attract expatriate crowds 'Ibe Washington Post 'Tis a miracle year for the Family McCourt. Frank McCourt's memoir " 'Tis" was released Tuesday. It's the sequel to "Angela's Ashes," his heart- tugging, 1997 Pulitzer Prize winner about growing up in a poverty-stricken Irish home with a long-suffering mother and an alcoholic father, which has been a best seller in both hardcover and paperback. "A Monk Swimming," a coming-to-America mem- oir by Frank's kid brother Malachy, has sold briskly since its June publication. Youngest brother Alphonsus is trying to sell his own memoir. And Frank and Malachy's play, "A Couple of Blaguards." opens here Tuesday. In a full McCourt press on America, the three broth- ers are spinning tales of their past. They are in no dan- ger of living unexamined lives. Like chefs over a well- cooked turkey, they are slicing, dicing, chopping and shopping around their histories in person, in print, onstage and on screen. Conor McCourt, Malachy's son, this year produced his second documentary on his father and uncles, and the Hollywood version of "Angela's Ashes" is to be released in December. Being a McCourt is a full-time business. And burden. "We have both come to the conclusion," says Malachy of himself and Frank, "that we're so (bleeping) bored with ourselves." U.. On a recent morning, Malachy, 68, grabs a bagel and coffee at Cup'A Cup'A in the Watergate before rehearsal. He's a right jolly old elf with his wispy white hair, bushy white eyebrows and a melodious brogue that makes swearing sound sweet. Is he envious of Frank's fame? No, he says, not in the least. In fact, he's tickled that Frank is now center stage. After all, didn't Frank toil for 30 years in a New York high school classroom while Malachy (pronounced MAL-a-kee) lived the high life - saloon keeper, soap opera regular, radio talk show host, movie star? It was Frank's phenomenal success with "Angela's Ashes" - described in a Washington Post review as "an instant classic of the genre" - that catapulted the McCourt name into prominence. Reviews of " 'Tis" have not been so generous, how- ever. And "Monk," Malachy's memoir of his young- adult years in this country, has been hammered. Kirkus Reviews decried the "curdled tone of self-pity and self- flagellation." The Post called it "a distressing embar- rassment." Malachy says he wrote it simply because a publisher "offered me a huge sum of money ... in the wake of Angela's Ashes.' "Monk" has sold well enough -- 250,000 hardcover copies in print - to warrant a second volume. He jokes that he was going to call it "I Read Your Brother's Book, But ..." Instead, he's calling it "Singing My Him Song." "I have no idea what that means," says Malachy. Such disarming honesty is his hallmark. He says he's not a well-educated man. "I'm very limited. I tend to stick with what I know, what I understand." One thing he understands is poverty. On his way to the Metro stop, a man begs for money. "He's here every morning," Malachy says, "asking for a dollar." Malachy, who suffered shame and self-loathing as he watched his mother panhandle on the streets of Limerick, walks past the beggar. Giving him a dollar, he says, won't solve anyone's problems. "There's no shortage of money or food," he says. "All it is is distribution" U.. Onstage at Ford's Theatre for a rousing run-through of "A Couple of Blaguards," Malachy, who plays him- self, and the actor playing Frank mix vivid memories with vaudeville song and dance. The play is equal parts party and poignancy. # The idea for "Blaguards" - the Irish pronunciation of "blackguards" - crystallized around 1980 when Frank and Malachy, notorious for spinning outrageous Irish yarns to students and saloon habitues, decided to take their shtick to the stage. A friend of Malachy's had a small theater in Manhattan, where they began spend- ing evenings telling thrice-told tales. "We didn't write anything down,"he says. The result was a sort of improvisational autobiogra- phy - snappy vignettes of growing up Catholic in Limerick, of a destitute mother, of discovering the won- ders of the New World. "Sometimes the audience was gone before we were" he says. Before their mother, Angela McCourt, died in 1981, she saw the show. She stood up halfway through, Malachy remembers, and said: "It didn't happen that way! It's all a pack of lies!" The stories in the play, Malachy says, "are elabora- tions of our lives, not exaggerations." Over the years, the brothers performed the revue in Chicago, Pittsburgh and other places. They honed it to under two hours, and eventually Irish actors stepped in for one brother or another when neces- sary. Other theaters wanted to stage it, even without the McCourts. Malachy has played himself hundreds and hundreds of times. On the stark Ford's stage, with two chairs, a table and two pints of root beer that look like Guinness stout, the men lock arms and dance and sing Irish songs and recall sexual conquests. Frank's character tells ol his first Communion and his regurgitation of the sacred wafer. Malachy painfully recalls the deaths of three other McCourt siblings. "There's terrible shame in poverty" Malachy says. "It tears at your insides to this day. This play is a defense against those memories." Afterward. he sits in his dressing room, looking older than he did before the rehearsal. Against the wall, the air conditioner whinges. He takes off his costume - a blue shirt and khakis. And steps into his street clothes a blue shirt and khakis. "The more I do it," says Malachy, "the more reflec- tive I get." His mind wanders sometimes onstage. This, he predicts, will be his last run as a blaguard. And why not? The play has served its purpose. Its stories and songs are the primal matter from which "Monk" and "Angela" and " 'Tis" were created. But after dccades of hard drinking and creative sto- rytelling and dramatic reshaping of a memory of a memory of a memory, Malachy says he occasionally asks himself, "What is the reality?" U.. " 'A Couple of Blaguards' just skims the surface," says Frank, 69, of the work he co-wrote. "It just doesn't dig in anywhere. It skims along," he says from his apartment in New York. "There are moments of pathos, but it hews to the stereotype of the Irish. And that doesn't satisfy me anymore." In fact, he's memoired out. He's working on a navel. "I need space. I need to spread my wings, he says. "I want to play with the facts, play with the fantasies, enlarge, enhance and put the character in a situationand see what happens." In the prologue to " 'Tis,' Frank writes of dreaming of America as a child. One by one, his other brothers claimed to be having the same nocturnal reveries. "I appealed to my mother," Frank writes, "I told her it was- n't fair the way the whole family was invading my dreams. In a way, his brothers continue to invade his dre ms. But he won't hear of that. They have led distinctive lives. "Distinctive, ,not extraordinary," Malachy says. Alphie, 58, restores apartments in Manhattan. He says his agent doesn't want him talking about his mem- oir until it's sold. "I come from a very talkative fani'ly," he says. "I have to fight for space. I take the back seat and wait for the opportunity" Michael, 63, who the others say is the best storyteller in the family, is recovering from a heart attack. He runs a saloon in San Francisco. The Washington Post The last time a movie starring Shahrukh Khan opened at Loehmann's Twin Cinemas, the line stretched across the strip mall and hundreds of fans couldn't get seats. .liences packed the suburban the- ater for weeks. $o, just to be safe, Monika Khatri arrved early on a recent Saturday to se4 the latest film from India's No. 1 stay. The problem was that everyone else did, too. Sikh men wearing tur- bais waited in line behind Sri Lahkan teenagers in Nike caps. [ an mothers in saris tried to con- t restless children as adolescent Afghan girls traded gossip by the bo$ office. Indian folk music floated out of cars searching the jammed lot foi parking spaces. "These movies bring you closer to home, because we are. all so far awiay," said Khatri, 49, a computer anelyst from New Delhi, explaining why the S8-a-ticket, three-hour H di films are worth the trouble. " ey're good entertainment, and they help you keep in touch with the culture." Two suburban theaters showing Hindi films nightly have become lively gathering places for the region's growing community of South Asian immigrants. Their suc- cess - and the success of theaters like them in more than 30 other U.S. c s - can be traced to remarkably d oted fans who see the Indian film world as a kitschy alternative to Hollywood. Affectionately nicknamed Bollywood, the Bombay movie industry churns out as many as 800 filhns annually, most of them lavish milsicals featuring attractive stars ano far-fetched plots. (consider "Baadshah," the new comedy-action film in which a s ing, dancing, sharpshooting pri- v. eye saves a government minister from assassination. 0 r "Taal," which begins as a clas- sic, star-crossed romance involving a billionaire's son and a young village woman - then she becomes an international rock star. ("Taal" eatned more per screen the weekend it ppened than any Hollywood film an ranked 20th on Variety's box ce list. And that's without subti- tlqs.) Invariably set in exotic locales full o i glamorous characters in beautiful cqstumes, Bollywood movies are p pular in India as escapist fantasies fao a vast rural underclass. In the Upited States, they often play to a different audience: well-educated professionals who already have "dscaped." "Here, it's nostalgia, a link to home," said Karan Capoor, 31, a management consultant in Arlington, Va. "In a certain way, particularly for those of us who grew up in India, it's part of who we are." Capoor said it's easier for the edu- cated to enjoy a Bollywood film here. "There's a bit of a snob factor," he said. "To be honest, if I was living in Calcutta, I wouldn't be caught dead going to 'Baadshah."' More people from India and Pakistan settled in the Washington area this decade than from anywhere else in Asia, and community leaders say South Asians have emerged as one of the largest ethnic groups in the region, their numbers approach- ing 100,000. The crowds at Loehmann's in Falls Church, Va., and Laurel Town Center Theaters in Laurel, Md., are also full of immigrants from other parts of the world, including Afghanistan, Iran, the Middle East, Africa and the Caribbean - people who grew up watching Hindi films though they may not speak the language. "It's so much fun," said Asha Farah, 33, of Vienna, Va., a Somali nurse who previously lived in Saudi Arabia. "When we were little, we would stay up all night and watch Indian movies, so it reminds you of when you were young." And on a Friday night at the the- aters, you'll find their teenage chil- dren, born and raised in the United States, who embrace India's pop cul- ture as fervently as they do America's. Some parents hope to reinforce cultural values, as the films often emphasize respect for elders and the benefits of arranged marriages.. And there are almost no sex scenes. "The movies have a tremendous influence on my kids," said Rekha Uppal, 33, a mother of two in Potomac, Va. "We like it because it keeps them in touch with the culture. They learn the language, and they have fun." The theaters are among the few public places where the South Asian community comes together. Loehmann's has shown free presen- tations of international cricket matches and often raises money for community causes. Laurel serves samosas - pastry turnovers - and tea with the popcorn and Milk Duds. "It's a very homey atmosphere," said Hamza Javed, 21, of Centreville, Va., a Pakistani tech worker who immigrated four years ago. "It's the only fun I have. After 90 or 100 hours of work, it's a relief to relax and see all the same people." Bored with classes? Tired of watching the same movies over and over on HBO? Write for Daily Arts. Call 763-0379 and ask for Jessie or Chris. As part of the Northern Trust team, you'll enjoy the exciting atmosphere of our downtown Chicago location and an outstanding compensation/benefits package. 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