“I’m half-Irish. My mother was Irish. Deadly with imitations. Loved mimicking people. And we all grew up with this fine art of how-well-could-you-get-someone-down.”—Oscar-nominated American actor John Travolta quoted in Steve Daly, “Face to Face in ‘'Face/Off,’'' Entertainment Weekly, June 20, 1997
What Travolta (like yours truly, a product of
Englewood, NJ) is talking about, in a sense, is his uncanny “ear” for how
people talk. While acting is the obvious vehicle for this talent, others of Irish
descent channeled that into writing instead: John
O’Hara, George V. Higgins, and James Joyce.
(The image accompanying this post shows Travolta in
the movie Primary Colors, in which he played Jack Clayton, a Presidential
candidate with a Southern accent and a smooth way with words—surely not like
anyone the American people have ever encountered, right?)
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