The Telegram (St. John's)

Putting on the glitz

Linehan’s compendium of province’s brushes with fame is fun but could use a few tweaks

- Joan Sullivan Joan Sullivan is editor of Newfoundla­nd Quarterly magazine. She reviews both fiction and non-fiction for The Telegram.

Brokaw, about “Come From Away” and the events that had inspired the now massively successful production.

Linehan’s curiosity was piqued. “How often does this happen? How often does Newfoundla­nd and Labrador factor in pop culture?”

There are already compilatio­ns of Newfoundla­nd and Labrador trivia, but “And the Tony Goes to …” skews different. This book “is about those times when Newfoundla­nd and Labrador caught the internatio­nal spotlight or had a moment of stardom.” As such, the title nods towards the critical awards and box office numbers “Come From Away” has generated on Broadway and in London’s West End.

The book opens with a general survey of Newfoundla­nd and Labrador’s climate, geography, topography, anthropolo­gy, millennia of exploratio­n and settlement and demographi­cs (N.L. “residents account for 0.000075 per cent of the world’s population”). From there the chapters are laid out chronologi­cally, from 1900 up to and through the Second World War, and then by the decade after.

Among many other topics, Linehan notes how the Prohibitio­n era “allegedly” brought Al Capone to St. John’s; his strategic goal was St-pierre-miquelon, a vital source of booze. As to that: “In a strange twist of geography, the trip from Newfoundla­nd to St-pierre — with its time zone 30 minutes ahead of Newfoundla­nd’s — is one of the few experience­s on the planet where you will set your clock ahead, not back, when travelling west.”

Integral to the story of “Come From Away,” Newfoundla­nd and Labrador, and especially Gander, had great aviation significan­ce. Gander was once the largest airport in the world, was a key component to the Second World War ferry command, and its positionin­g (and runway length) is why all “the plane people” landed there on 9/11. Mid-20th century Hollywood, too, glamourous­ly sashayed through Gander — and projected this province on its screens, as in “The Spirit of St. Louis,” with Jimmy Stewart as Charles Lindbergh sighting St. John’s from his cockpit window. (In another of the many other examples Linehan has discovered,

Agents 86 and 99 of “Get Smart” are ordered to locate and neutralize a malignant mastermind hiding off the coast of “Newfinlind.”)

Not all the stories come through TV or film. There are lots of fact-based accounts as well. “September 1, 1975, the Concorde made two return flights from Paris to Gander, on the same day, making it the first aircraft to fly across the Atlantic four times within a single day. As a side note, when the pilots first landed in Gander, they went to the local Holiday Inn (renamed the Irving West hotel) to refresh themselves before their return flight to Paris. Hotel assistant general manager Vince Linehan welcomed the pilots and offered them a compliment­ary room for their brief layover. As a return thank you, the pilots invited Linehan to join them on their trip back to Paris and return to Gander later that same day. Linehan readily agreed. However, the general manager, hearing of the generous offer, took the seat for himself.”

While there’s justifiabl­e attention paid to Gander, the book’s focus is very much province-wide. There’s coverage of royal tours, papal visits, stopovers by political figures like Colin Powell, and the internatio­nal news coverage of New Year’s Eve 1999.

Of course, not all encounters have been cordial or respectful. Brigitte Bardot is not a fan. Neither is Paul Mccartney. Dialogue on “Ellen,” Ellen Degeneres’s 1990s sitcom, included the line “It’s true. Those Newfies are so stupid.”

But most are more openhearte­d and amiable. Meg Ryan, for example, has visited twice, and with then-fiancé John Cougar Mellencamp bought the first memory stone in Bannerman Park. And chef Anthony Bourdain was notably enticed and enchanted by the local cuisine. In tandem with this, the book examines how the province also goes out into the world, via the likes of actor Allan Hawco, the musicians of Great Big Sea and director Brad Peyton. And, of course, “Come From Away.”

There are some factual errors. The Royal St. John’s Regatta is the oldest continuing sporting event in North America, but it has not run “annually” since 1816 — it was on hiatus during both World Wars.

And the writing is, not choppy exactly, but a bit of a jumble of every piece of research. Which is fine, as Linehan wants to be encycloped­ic as well as entertaini­ng. I feel the organizati­on could have been better helped with a livelier design to service this, maybe a layout less chapter-y and more list-y. It’s dully text-heavy with kind of generic black-and-white photos. It should just look more fun. And an Index could punch it up as well.

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D ?? “And the Tony Goes to … Newfoundla­nd and Labrador on the World Stage,” by Scott Linehan; Boulder Books; $19.95; 160 pages.
CONTRIBUTE­D “And the Tony Goes to … Newfoundla­nd and Labrador on the World Stage,” by Scott Linehan; Boulder Books; $19.95; 160 pages.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada