As a young woman growing up poor in extremely rural Welch, West
Virginia, all Jeannette Walls could think about was moving to New York
to escape her alcoholic father and eccentric mother. The family had
moved countless times before, running from town to town as soon as the
creditors came knocking and the money had run out.
New York, the
great Gotham, was calling, but her domineering father, Rex, would have
none of it, requiring her to all but escape one day after high school.
Her
first New York writing job was as a celebrity takedown artist — ironic
for a young woman who had grown up without a television.
“I
really don’t care about celebrities, [so] I don’t know how I ended up
writing about them,” Ms. Walls told The Washington Times at a District
stop on a recent press tour.
While nonplussed with her job, she knew that she absolutely had to write. But what?
“I
love journalism, I love truth-telling, [but] I was doing something
else,” she said of her life in the Big Apple. “And I was kind of ready
to dig out of that.”
The story needing telling was staring her in the face.
In 2005
Ms. Walls published “The Glass Castle,” a memoir detailing the transient
life she and her siblings led as her parents, Rex and Rose Mary,
shuttled them about the country until they finally “settled” in West
Virginia, where Rex would spend drink-fueled nights pouring over his
plans to build the edifice of the title for his family to be completely
off the grid.
“The irony, some would say hypocrisy, was that I’m chasing all the truths out there but not my own,” Ms. Walls said.
The
book is now a film from Lionsgate, starring Oscar-winner Brie Larson as
the on-screen adult Jeannette, Woody Harrelson as Rex and Naomi Watts
as Rose Mary.
Ms. Walls didn’t spare the reader from her father’s
drinking, his overbearing nature and refusal to relinquish control as
his children grew into adulthood. Mr. Harrelson, in his best performance
in years, brings a fearsomeness to Rex but also an undeniable love for
his family despite his many flaws.
“Honestly, readers were a lot
smarter than I am, and the readers kept saying ‘I think your father was
mentally ill,’” Ms. Walls, who now lives about two hours from the
District in rural Virginia with her author husband, said. “I’d read a
couple of books on mental illness, and I think they were right: He was
trying to self-mediate. A lot of alcoholics are trying to
self-medicate.”
One of the reasons Ms. Walls said she left the
celebrity business was not only a wish to be more authentic in her
reporting, but also how sharing stories, she believes, “makes people
feel safer.”
Even, it seems, some rather high-profile people. Ms.
Walls requires asking an unnamed celeb an “insightful question” about
her dress when the starlet asked the interrogator to switch off the mic.
“She
said, ‘I wanted to thank you for writing about your father as candidly
as you did. My father is also an alcoholic, and your book helped me come
to terms’” with her own family situation, Ms. Walls recalls, adding the
famous actress said she also handed “The Glass Castle” to several of
her friends.
“That’s what it’s all about. It’s not about fame, it’s about sharing stories and making people feel safer,” Ms. Walls says now.
Despite
her rather unusual upbringing and difficult young adulthood, Ms. Walls
outwardly seems to bear few of the scars of those formative experiences.
During this interview she laughs loudly and often, belaying an
un-self-conscious manner and nary a trace of bitterness.
Her mother, Rose Mary, even now lives on a separate small home on the property Ms. Walls shares with her husband.
“Not
‘with’ me, because I’m not a saint. I built a place for her out back,”
Ms. Walls said, laughing again so much that she nearly doubles sideways.
“She makes me crazy sometimes.”
Rose Mary’s artworks are seen in
“The Glass Castle,” and the artist even jested to her daughter that the
works might “overshadow” everything else in the film.
“She was
calling my older sister Lori and going, ‘Who is this Naomi Watts
character anyway?’” Ms. Walls said when the Oscar-nominated Australian
actress was cast to play her in the film. “Then she saw the trailer. She
was elated.”
Mr. Harrelson also got so into character as Rex that
Ms. Walls recalls hearing the “Cheers” actor saying things that her own
father had — but which were not in the script.
“That’s the degree to which he got inside my father’s head,” she said. “It was astonishing.”
An
early scene shows Rex not so much teaching his young daughter to swim
as letting go of her in a pool, whether she is ready or not.
“I used to be afraid of water. I’m not anymore,” Ms. Walls said. “Did it work? Yes. Would I recommend it other people? No.”
While
Rex is seen frequently drunk in “The Glass Castle,” Ms. Walls now
believes that he likely was attempting to drown his demons.
“One
of the things that I hope comes from this story is to continue this
conversation” about mental health awareness, she said, adding that her
father was one of a long line of so-called mad creative geniuses in the
vein of Vincent Van Gosh, William Blake and countless others. “Can we
harness these demons rather than trying to kill them?”
“The Glass
Castle” was filmed in Welch, West Virginia, not far from the actual
Walls family home. Ms. Walls recalls initial feelings of trepidation
returning to the town — in an area ravaged by the decline of the coal
industry — she escaped as a young woman.
“I was the lowest of the
low,” she said, adding her family name was used as a punch line by their
neighbors. “The more I go there [now], it’s just a place,” Ms. Walls
said. “It’s just a place where there’s a lot of people who are down on
their luck.”
Ms. Walls is quick to point out that in reportage such as her own book, truth and accuracy are not one and the same.
“The
trouble with characters and stereotypes is they’re accurate but they’re
not the whole story,” she said. “And that’s why I felt I had to tell a
book-length explanation of who and what my parents were.”
Ms.
Walls advices memoir-writers now to spare nothing in the name of
truthfulness, and not to worry about what the people in the manuscript
might think about it.
“I hope I was never cruel in my previous
line of work, but by definition, when you write about celebrities,
you’re either raising them up or pushing them down,” she said of her
former career in New York. “I’m not interested in making fun of people
anymore, I’m interested in compassion.”
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