On February 19, Carson McCullers, an American novelist, short story writer, playwright, essayist, and poet, would have been 100. To mark the occasion, there will be several events throughout the Village of Nyack.
Sunday, February 19 at 3p, Nyack Library and The Carson McCullers Center at Columbus State University will present After Carson’s A Tree. A Rock. A Cloud, original music composed and performed by Liliya Ugay (piano), accompanied by Paul Neubauer (viola). After the musical performance, there will be a dramatic reading of the short story, adapted and performed by poet/playwright John O’Keefe. A reception will be held at The Carson McCullers House, 131 S. Broadway, immediately following the program at the library.
Thursday, March 23 at 7p at the Nyack Library: Community read of two of Carson McCullers’ short stories, A Tree. A Rock. A Cloud. and A Domestic Dilemma. Nick Norwood, Director of the Carson McCullers Center, will also lead a discussion of the short stories.
Saturday, March 25 at 8p at the Nyack Center: Rivertown Film and The Carson McCullers Center present a screening of A Tree. A Rock. A Cloud and A Domestic Dilemma. The screening will be followed by a Q&A with filmmakers Kristi Zea and Karen Allen, and Nick Norwood, Director of the Carson McCullers Center.
Celebrate Carson McCullers
by Bill Batson, Nyack News & Views
February 19 is the birth date of Carson McCullers, who came to Nyack in 1945 to convalesce and create. For 22 years she found a place to do both, completing The Member of the Wedding, The Ballad of the Sad Cafe and Clock Without Hands. McCullers moved to the village five years after the publication of her acclaimed first novel, The Heart is a Lonely Hunter. On September 29, 1967, her heart and vascular system, weakened by a litany of ailments and the strain from the kind of despondency that often afflicts great artists, finally surrendered.
Through the generosity of her physician and friend, the late Dr. Mary Mercer, the literary legend’s legacy in Nyack will endure as her one-time home will soon become a part of Columbus State Universities’ Carson McCullers Center for Writers and Musicians.
The years that McCullers lived a few steps from downtown Nyack were divided between periods of productivity and infirmity. In his forward to Virginia Spencer Carr’s definitive biography of the author, playwright Tennessee Williams wrote, “I hope that with increasing study of Carson McCullers it will be recognized, generally, that despite the early onset of her many illnesses, she was, in her spirit, a person of rare and luminous health.”
Ironically, it was the early onset of illness that both shortened her life and led her to literature. She first considered becoming a writer during a bout of pneumonia, her first serious health scare, when she was 15 years old. McCullers identified with Eugene O’Neill, an author who was himself inspired to become a playwright during his recovery from tuberculosis. Her frail health deprived McCullers of the stamina required to pursue her dream of becoming a concert pianist. In 1936, during another doctor-ordered respite in her hometown of Columbus, Georgia, she pieced together the characters and circumstances that would become The Heart is a Lonely Hunter.
Richard Wright, author of Native Son, was deeply moved by the transcendent quality of McCullers prose. In a 1940 review in the New Republic, he proclaimed that “the most impressive aspect of The Heart Is a Lonely Hunter is the astonishing humanity that enables a white writer, for the first time in Southern fiction, to handle Negro characters with as much ease and justice as those of her own race.” (Wright and Carson would later spend time together in the legendary apartment house in Brooklyn where such important artists as Leonard Bernstein, W. H Auden, Gypsy Rose Lee, and Paul Bowles lived. Frequent visitor writer Anais Nin dubbed the artists haven February House because many of the tenants, like McCullers, were born in the second month of the year.)
McCullers’ Center Inherits Writer’s Home
Columbus State University announced the gift from the estate of Dr. Mary Mercer to the school’s Carson McCullers Center for Writers and Musicians. Mercer died on April 23, 2013, at the age of 101. The gift also includes some of McCullers’ possessions and $350,000 for the center’s operating expenses and program development.
McCullers’ three-story, 6,000-square-foot Victorian house overlooks the Hudson River in downtown Nyack.
“This acquisition presents a thrilling opportunity for our students to study in a great American city in a famous American author’s home,” Courtney George, the center’s director. “We intend to use the house for lodging for study-away programs in the New York City area, much like CSU’s Spencer House in Oxford, England.”
The center is dedicated to preserving McCullers’ legacy, nurturing American writers and musicians, educating young people and fostering the literary and musical life of Columbus, Georgia and the American South. The center operates a museum in McCullers’ childhood home in Columbus, presents educational and cultural programs, maintains an archive of materials about McCullers and her work, and offers fellowships for writers and composers.
In Hunter, McCullers delves deeper than the murders and riots that are the usual medium for exposing race and class injustice in literature, to plumb the internal landscape of the human soul twisted by prejudice and intolerance. She also manages to dedicate an equal amount of attention to the lives of every inhabitant of the fictional town that she creates: black and white, male and female, young and old.
Marianne Faust, who moved into the house a year after the author’s death, observed that McCullers’ tenants were as diverse and complex as the characters in her first novel. Faust and her husband, illustrator Jan Faust, shared the building from 1968-72 with a Haitian minister, a doctor, an actor and a rock musician. McCullers subdivided her house into apartments to defray the significant cost of her on-going medical expenses, with funding for those renovations provided by her friend Tennessee Williams.
During her life, the writer hosted some of the most famous and talented artists in the world. This photo captures a dinner party that included actor Marilyn Monroe, Monroe’s husband at the time, playwright Arthur Miller and author Isak Denizen.
Each year, students from Columbus State University’s Carson McCullers Center for Writers and Musicians visit Nyack. Jack Dunnigan, owner of Pickwick Book Shop, says the group arrives at his bookstore to view the portrait of Carson McCullers he proudly displays. During her life, McCullers would wander the stacks at Pickwick, when the store was located across the street.
”I was always homesick for a place I had never seen, and now I have found it,” McCullers wrote about Nyack. ”It is here, this house, this town.”
We should take great comfort in the fact that the author’s lonely heart found some relief in our village. If we were to fail to incorporate, advance and celebrate her legacy in our future plans for the village, that would be downright heartless.
Thanks to Marianne and Jan Faust, Courtney George, Mia Leo, Judith Martin, John Papastathis, John Shields and Diana Wilkins for providing material and inspiration for this column. And special thanks to Jack Dunnigan of Pickwick Books.
An activist, artist, and writer, Bill Batson lives in Nyack, NY. Nyack Sketch Log: “Celebrate Carson McCullers” © 2014 Bill Batson. Visit billbatsonarts.com to see more.
Nyack Sketch Log is published every Tuesday at www.NyackNewsAndViews.com