Emmett Grogan interviewed in the Sunday Times (London) by Kenneth Allsop (1973)

One thought on “Emmett Grogan interviewed in the Sunday Times (London) by Kenneth Allsop (1973)

  1. The Sunday Times 4/2/73 The man from the neon jungle EMMETT GROGAN is alive, and was last seen padding foxiiy through  London. What Grogan? Emmett who? Enimest Grogan Is the underground’s  Howard Hughes. Both-the xillionaire skulking in hotel penthouse  suites and the hipster outlaw melling into ghetto shadows- dwell in a  dazzling glare of secrecy. At least, I still don’t know if Howard Hughes exists and, although  the only reporter in Britain who hasn’t been shaking the shrubbery  for him, come out equal on that one. But Entmett Grogan I have  touched. My hand twice engaged with his lissom paw, upon meeting and  parting, and we actually rapped, as they say, for a while. Emmett Grogan (not. almost needless to say. his real name) appeared  in Britain about the same time as did his book, Ringolevio: A Life  Played For Keeps, a fiction-form autobiography whleh runs from his  promising beginning as a Brooklyn dead- end kid heroin addiet, aged  12. through Park Avenue jewelburglaries, jet-set cavortings he tween  Paris and Rome. IRA bombings, and urban anarchist activities against  what he sees as the military-industrial death culture of his  hon:efand, where he started the San Francisco Digger movement of free  hand- outs of hijacked food and cloth ing to the poor. On the telephone. his literary agent, John Walfers, although keen  that we shouid meet, wasn’t confident that he could deliver his  author into an interview situation, “He’s terribly paranoid about  meeting people, especially the Press,” he said worriedly. Emmett Grogan arrived at 11 am. He looked greeny-pale at surfacing  into the straight world at that hour: the gold ear ring in his left  lobe had a fine tremor: he smoked Pali Malls without pause. His eyes  tickered. automatically noting the nearest wall to get his hack to  and which window could be dived out of. He was wearing two silver  bracelets, suede bell-bottoms and wedge heeled Western boots.  From his hair you couldn’t be positive where he fits in: hippyishly  shoulder-length at the back, rocker-style sculpted sideboards, and  full frontal baroque James Dean billows. He has a bony frozen face  (you couidn’t get cooler) and a pipe cleaner-trim body which weaves-a  mixture of ballet and boxing-into illustrations of his adventures. From the start I had to learn to survive on the streets. They’re  familiar, my territory. I don’t trust anyone down there but I know  how to get by. My philosophy has been assuming a freedom to do what  needs to be done. I don’t mean just giving rein to my satisfactions.  Way back, just as some people perfect yoga, I perfected badness, But  1 became a political animal. My attitudes didn’t change but my  motives did. I was at war against property; I liberated and re- distributed it by community organisation. “I don’t advocate violence. Violence is stupid. Sometimes it happens  by accident, something the guerrilla with no alternative has to  resort to, but the only Violence I’ve committed has been against rat  finks who deserved mayhem.” In Ringolevio (that’s a New York children’s game in which one team  frees its members from the opposition’s “jail”) you get the idea he  enjoys being a real terror. He moves bandit-like with gun or knife  through the imminent danger of the slums, Catfooting through  Greenwich Village, he whips an orange from a market stall, eats it,  then from a fishstand farther along the block scoops up shaved ice to  clean his sticky fingers. That’s the way Emmett Grogan sees elegantly  choregraplied opportunism. He turned from acquisitive robbery to freelance social work in the  neon Sherwood Forest. He decided to get the Lower EastSide cleared of  abandoned cars and rotting garbage by enticing private enterprise  firms to tackle the job which the private. enterprise sanitation  authorities were receiving kick hack to stay clear of. What do you  know-the private sanitation companies, which fixed the franchise and  collected the fee but not the garbage, were run by the good old Maff. Grogan was received by the “gentlemen of respect” in the Cefalu  Social Club and persuaded them that an onslaught on the stinking  litter among the Puerto  Rican tenements could earn themgood publicity. They listened, discussed the proposition in the  dialect of their native Sicily, then said “It’s a good idea, but we  don’ wanna throw no money away for nothin, unnersan? So, you make-a  damn sure it counts front page. Okay, you a good kid. What you  gettin’ outta all this?” Grogan’s explanation that he wanted everyone to live together in  peace, harmony and hygiene seemed to balle the Malinso some. what.  but they detailed their squatis for the great clean-up. Big deal.  Except that some two-timing flower freak whom Grogan had crossed  squealed to the mayor’s office, and the official trucks roared in to  pick up the rubbish and the credit. When Grogan (a touch jittery) returned to apologise to the dons for  the scheme going awry they listened stedaily, then shrugged and  grunted:” You win some, you lose some. Maybe it works out better next  time, okay But you gotta learn the people you dealin’ with over there  on the East Sitte a little bit about silenciO, right”. Power to the People, and lift up the neglected, by forming the  Diggers, named after the 17th- century English partist agrarian  reformers who appropriated common land around Coblam. Officially the  fond being dished out at free-for-all par kitchens was donated and  second hand: coincidentally many the clothes meat trucks were being  knocked warehouses looted and department stores raided. The enthusiasm of bearded Haight Ashbury liberal artists waned before  the grinding monotony of dawn-to-dusk distribution. The brothers  dispersed from the Human Be-In, just as did the Summer of Love  evaporate autumnally in a haze of LSD, a tinkle of prayer bells and  instant Karma. Meanwhile Grogan had run up against the problems of  becoming a folk anti- hero. Experience from his criminal past had  taught him to  keep a low and modest profile, to stay camouflaged and  fleet-footed. Grogan toid a Michigan revolutionary student congress that the  Diggers were doing their job” not like the Salvation Army or romantic  Robin Hoods but be cause they love the people, who need to see other  people giving it all away so that they can dig the basic absurdity of  this goddamn parasitical society. But you’ve got to remain invisible  and anonymous, otherwise the fuzz will slam you away if your name’s  written all over it. I you’re really serious should know what you  look like.” To that. the counter-culture superstar, Abbie Hoffman  jeered: Emmett, you’re in to get co-opted. They’re make an image out  of you and steal your anonymity and put you on the cover of Time.”Not  me.” snapped Grogan “I ain’t goin’ to put me on sale”. Well, here’s  RingoleVio on sale. It’s a sprawling, often hammy Mailer-cum-Genet  production, too monotoned to differentiate between hathos and pathos.  Agreed Emmett Grogan’s life has been no joke, but nor, you suspect   would he see one if it was hung out on banners. Yet it’s a powerful  picture of an alienated character ranging suspiciously from  underworld to underground, trying to conceal any growing  softheartedness under cowboy tough-talk and a valuable documentary of  aperiod in an American life which produced such phenomena as Stokey  Carmichael and Spiro Agnew. However, look what happened. The mystery man has put his words on  paper and his photograph in the hook, and he gives an interview to  The Sunday Times, and the process of turning pariah into pin-up is  inexorably in train. Squinting warily in the limelight. Emmett Grogan, on his way out and  absent-mindedly flipping my mortice lock with flexible fingers, said  defensively: “I’m no different now. But everybody on the streets  really wants to get off them, and there are only two ways; into the  nick or up out of it all. Writing it all down may have been a bridge  for me.”Kenneth Allsop

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