The following was written by Dennis Dooley, for the Cleveland Arts Prize website . . .The first Cleveland Arts Prize in Literature had been awarded, just the year before, to novelist Jo Sinclair, the creator of a substantial body of work. The second year, it went to a young writer who had been...
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The following was written by Dennis Dooley, for the Cleveland Arts Prize website . . .The first Cleveland Arts Prize in Literature had been awarded, just the year before, to novelist Jo Sinclair, the creator of a substantial body of work. The second year, it went to a young writer who had been virtually unknown until just a couple of years before. But the glowing reception that had greeted Raymond DeCapite's first two novels, The Coming of Fabrizze (1960) and A Lost King (1962), announced the arrival of a very extraordinary writer.The San Francisco Chronicle pronounced Fabrizze "A rare novel"; "Exultant!" proclaimed the Kansas City Star. "[DeCapite] has written a modern folk tale. . .filled with love, laughter and the joy of life," wrote Orville Prescott in The New York Times. The Herald Tribune found it "beguiling." And Mark Van Doren, the dean of American Literature, dashed off a personal note to the author that began "Thank you for Fabrizze, who filled this house last night with his soul and voice."Set on Cleveland's south side during the 1920s, the novel tells the story of a young Italian immigrant who finds work as a "gandy dancer" (laborer) laying track for the Newburgh & Southshore Railroad. But the tone and extraordinary spirit of DeCapite's book has already been set, in the opening pages, which chronicle the return of Fabrizze's uncle, after eight years of hard, brutal work in Ohio, to his village in the Abruzzi region of southern Italy. "Sweet was the welcome for Augustine," writes De Capite. "His mother wept. The watchful men saved their smiles until he came to them. Women with eyes like jewels were moving in to squeeze his hand. . . Suddenly everyone was shouting his name. Augustine would remember the sound of it ringing through the mountains of Italy." He had sworn to himself "to come home and tell the truth about America. And then what happened? One kiss from the village and I surrendered on the spot." "It was said that Augustine had three varying accounts of his rise to power in America," DeCapite tells us. "No one remarked on the fact that his hands were swollen with work." Caught up in the dream and the yearning, young Cenino Fabrizze accompanies Augustine back to Cleveland, where the charming, exuberant lad wins the hearts and the confidence of the neighborhood--just in time for the Stockmarket Crash of 1929. Much as DeCapite's own father had done.In fact the story had already been told in a poignantly realistic novel titled Maria by Ray's older brother Michael, a successful writer by then living in New York. But Ray, a little boy in Maria, was too young at the time to identify much with the struggles of their mother to raise three children in the aftermath of the debacle. He was to find his own take on the family story during a visit with Michael to their father's village in the Abruzzi: the dreams and the energy of the young are larger than life--and infuse life itself with a passionate intensity, an aura of expectation, that are later forgotten. "You can all but smell the sausage and onion frying," wrote the Herald Tribune 's John K. Hutchens of Fabrizze's prose. "A bit of neighborhood gossip takes off like. . .a roman candle. A casual inquiry after a neighbor's health glows like a lyric."Small wonder that several options, one for a musical, were taken on Fabrizze. DeCapite's second novel, A Lost King (Mackay, 1962), inspired at least four screenplays. One of them, a very unfaithful adaptation called Harry and Son, was filmed by Paul Newman. The novel (which Newman, to his dismay, discovered only later) concerned the tension between, and love of, an Italian immigrant father and his grown day-dreamer son (the Times reviewer affectionately described him as "an inept Huckleberry Finn"). The pair embody conflicting American Dreams: the chance to work hard and make something of yourself, and the chance to follow your bliss and live free and untethered, a slave to no man. DeCapite was again hailed as "a writer of exquisite talents" (John Fante) and A Lost King was called "a celebration of the human heart" (Saturday Review).In the years that followed, Ray DeCapite, who still makes his home in Cleveland, continued to mine the rich lessons of humanity--and vivid sense of place--he knew growing up in what is now known (to all but lifelong residents) as Tremont. During the thirty-some years he had lived with his mother and sister Marie, a Cleveland schoolteacher, in an apartment over a Greek coffee house, the area had been a lively stew of ethnic heritages still very much alive; of memorable characters; and world-class storytellers. The December 1976 issue of Cleveland Magazine was given over to a complete short, but deeply affecting, new novel by DeCapite titled Pat the Lion on the Head, which was later published in book form. Excerpts from an as yet unpublished novel, All Our Former Frolics, also appeared. During the late 1970s and'80s--with his good wife Sally keeping the wolf from the door with a job at the Cleveland Clinic and money coming in from options and reprints of parts of his first two books in a number of anthologies (most recently The Italian American Reader [HarperCollins, 2003], where he rubs shoulders with the likes of Mario Puzo, Gay Talese and Don DeLillo--DeCapite followed his love of playful, crisp dialogue into the theater, turning out four plays. In Sparky and Company (1978), a family comes together to share memories of an eccentric relative they are told has died, in the process coming, belatedly (they think), to cherish him, while the old man listens from the other room. The play won "Best New Script" from the Cleveland Critics Circle and a New York production at Il Teatro Rinascimento. Things Left Standing (1980), and a double bill of two one-acts, Zinfandel and Where the Trains Go (1982), were also warmly received.DeCapite's gifts are still apparent in two short novels published between one set of covers in 1996, Go Very Highly Trippingly To and Fro (see excerpts) and The Stretch Run (Sparkle Street Books, San Francisco). "With his brawny, playful dialogue, his sparse scenic descriptions and his brisk yet deep characterizations," said Publishers Weekly, "DeCapite succeeds in doing what others only aim for: he has constructed a world that feels real."--Dennis Dooley1986 Winner of the Cleveland Arts Prize for LiteratureSpring 2008For more on the author, go to sparklestreet.com/RayDecapite
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