The TV news is full of
Pfizer talk and all I can think of when I hear the name is that of John
Augustine Mulcahy, who was once a big deal at Pfizer and with whom I once had a
major falling out. And when I think of Jack Mulcahy, I am reminded of the
Norman Wisdom movie, There Was a Crooked Man. This is in part set in a quiet,
dreary seaside town called Sleath, where the bigwig McKillup owns everything
and everybody and is bleeding the place dry. Norman eventually exacts his
revenge by blowing up Sleath. When I saw this film in the Regent Theatre in
Greymouth 60 years ago, I wondered if anyone had ever thought of coming back to
my own home town and doing the same thing. But the real reason Jack Mulcahy
puts me in mind of McKillup is Waterville, a village on the Iveragh Peninsula
in County Kerry, Ireland, which in the 1960s was Charlie Chaplin’s favourite
holiday hideout. The town's name in Irish, Coireán, means “little cauldron”,
but when I went there, there was nothing much cooking except for whatever pie
Jack Mulcahy had his finger in. And there were, it seemed, a great many. His
pride and joy, however, was the championship golf links he’d had Eddie Hackett
build in 1968.
More on that later. First,
a little bit about Jack Mulcahy, a self-made billionaire. He was born in 1906
at Harbour View, Dungarvan, County Waterford. He once claimed to his family
that he had spent time in Kilkenny jail for killing the Black and Tans who
attacked his sisters, and that he escaped death only because he was under age.
It is known that he was a dispatch carrier for the IRA during the Irish civil
war and was imprisoned by the Free State government for 13 months before
emigrating to the US in 1923, aged 17. He went on to make millions from an odd
mix of steel and pharmaceuticals, the latter an investment to avoid taxes.
On September 10, 1975, I
was sent with my trusty Olivetti Lettera 32 portable typewriter to Waterville to cover the first Kerrygold Classic golf tournament. I
drove down from Dublin in a Datsun 1200, got lost on the Ring of Kerry, and
told bewildered readers of The Irish Press the next morning that I thought I
deserved to win the pre-tournament long-driving competition instead of some
bloke called Tony Jacklin, who had to pay a heavy price by shooting 82 in the
first round of the tournament proper. What I’ve never previously revealed is
that the barman at the golf club calmed me down with the most refreshing drink
I’ve ever had: fresh Kerry milk and dry ginger ale (don’t try it unless the
milk is super fresh).
The five days I spent in
Waterville rate high among the most memorable in my half-century sports writing
career, though none of the more pronounced recollections have anything to do
with golf. The first night a Kerry friend, who’d played rugby for New York and
Ireland and later became one his nation’s leaders, caught up with me and we
gatecrashed what idle bar gossip had it was an orgy on the top floor of the
Waterville Lake Hotel. It was nothing of the sort, of course, but a wild
gathering of drunken and uncouth cashed-up Kerrymen, returned from their
building sites in England (perhaps with the intent of blowing up their old home
town). I met the sister of the young American amateur who was about to win the
tournament, but that’s a story which will have to wait for the Messenger
memoirs. And those will have to first get past the censors and defamation
lawyers before publication, so don’t hold your breath.
The next evening was spent
in Ballinskelligs just outside Waterville, in the company of a couple of
notorious drug smugglers and gun runners, Howard Marks and Jim McCann. Things
turned decidedly ugly, and I ended up giving Simon Owen and his wife a dreadful
fright (Simon shot a first up 90). But even those events gave no warning as to
the horror that lay ahead of me. On the Friday morning I was summons to a
meeting with Jack Mulcahy and Bob Hope. Mulcahy, who’d given Richard Nixon
$600,000 toward his 1972 re-election campaign, liked to show people that his
millions allowed him to mix with the rich and the famous, and he had invited
golf fanatic Hope to attend the Kerrygold Classic. Mulcahy mistakenly assumed
I’d enjoy listening to Hope’s wisecracks, but I was much more interested in
hearing what Mulcahy and Hope, who had both helped Nixon get re-elected,
thought about Watergate. Hope promptly got up and walked out, leaving me to
deal with an irate Mulcahy. His 'friend' felt slighted, apparently. Little did I
know then that the year before, Mulcahy had taken offence at the mention of
Nixon during the sermon at a Sunday morning mass in Waterville. Mulcahy
intervened from the congregation and objected to Nixon's being mentioned from
the pulpit, describing him as an honest man and a friend, and accusing the US
media of being inspired and run by communists.
The golf tournament was
decided in a playoff but the winner couldn’t claim the prizemoney and was given
a butter tub of gold instead. I headed off to Celbridge in Kildare to catch up
with Eric Clapton, Mick Jagger, Sean Connery, Shirley MacLaine, Burgess
Meredith, Judy Geeson, Milo O’Shea and John Huston for the filming of Circasia under a big top beside Straffan House. Outside, in the dusk, I told
Clapton his skin looked purple and he said I didn’t look too well myself. After
five days in Waterville, it was hardly surprising.
All of the above is true.
No names have been changed to protect the innocent.
Seems that the with the increased spread of the virus the Government should be getting as much of all the vaccines they can.
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