Ross O'Carroll-Kelly
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Ross O'Carroll-Kelly | |
Author | Paul Howard |
---|---|
Country | Ireland |
Language | English |
Genre(s) | Humour, Dick-lit |
Publisher | The O'Brien Press, Penguin |
Media type | Paperback and audiobook |
Ross O'Carroll-Kelly is a fictional rugby jock created by Irish journalist Paul Howard. The character of Ross is a satirical depiction of a wealthy, self-obsessed, Foxrock, rugby union player. Howard distances himself from his protagonist's viewpoint by describing himself as being "as working class as curry sauce, processed cheese slices and borrowing money from the credit union", not to mention being turned away from the exclusive Lillies Bordello nightclub many times. The character first started in January 1998, in a weekly column within the Sunday Tribune newspaper and now appears in The Irish Times. It is written in the first person from Ross's perspective. The columns (which have been adapted into a series of books) chronicle the events of Ross's life, much in the manner of fictional diarists like Bridget Jones or Adrian Mole.
Contents |
[edit] Books
Seven Ross O'Carroll-Kelly novels have been published, the first four by The O'Brien Press and the last three by Penguin Books:
- The Miseducation of Ross O'Carroll Kelly, covering Ross's last two years at Castlerock College and his Leinster Senior Cup victory (later editions are titled The Miseducation Years)
- Roysh Here, Roysh Now... The Teenage Dirtbag Years, covering Ross's first year at UCD and holiday in the U.S. (later editions are titled The Teenage Dirtbag Years)
- The Orange Mocha-Chip Frappuccino Years, in which Ross's parents force him to fend for himself as an estate agent
- PS, I Scored The Bridesmaids, in which Ross marries Sorcha
- The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Nightdress, in which Ross discovers he is a father
- Should Have Got Off at Sydney Parade, in which Ross gets Sorcha pregnant
- This Champagne Mojito Is The Last Thing I Own, in which Ross's father is imprisoned and his assets seized
- Mr S and the Secrets of Andorra's Box, out in October 2008
The titles reference The Miseducation of Lauryn Hill, Teenage Dirtbag, Adrian Mole: The Cappuccino Years, PS, I Love You and The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-time respectively. The reference to Sydney Parade refers to alighting from the DART at the last stop before Sandymount - a reference to coitus interruptus. (A similar expression exists in Cork speech, "getting off at Dunkettle" and in a Sydney, Australia colloquial phrase "getting off at Redfern".)
Ross O'Carroll-Kelly's Guide to (South) Dublin: How To Get By On, Like, €10,000 A Day, a mock travel guide to "SoCoDu", has also been published by Penguin.
[edit] Language
The column is written in an eye dialect representation of the intonation peculiar to affluent areas of South Dublin, commonly called "Dortspeak". This accent is one of the primary targets of satire in the columns and novels. Due to the wide variety of esoteric slang used in the novels, a glossary ("ThesauRoss") appears as an appendix to Ross O'Carroll-Kelly's Guide to (South) Dublin: How to Get by On, Like, €10,000 A Day. Though the basic idioms are derived largely from standard Hiberno-English, the South Dublin accent as represented by Howard has distinctive features:
- 'Car' is written as 'cor', 'Arts' as 'Orts', 'star' as 'stor', and 'fuck' as 'fock'.
- The "soft T" prevails: 'Right' becomes 'Roysh', 'DART' becomes 'Dorsh'.
- A form of rhyming slang exists: A taxi is a 'Jo Maxi' (or simply a 'Jo'), a face is a "boat race" and a love-bite is a 'Denis' (Denis Hickie). Ross often refers to having an Allied Irish (Allied Irish Bank: wank). This can be confusing to overseas readers, especially when overused - "the pen is Pádraig" meaning "the stink is fierce" ("pen ink" meaning "stink" and "Padraig Pearse", "fierce").
- Other forms of wordplay (occasionally employing equally obscure references) are also common. For example, a girl who has "fallen to the communists", has "Munster playing at home" or has won a "starring role in a period costume drama" is (or is speculated to be) having her period.
- Sentences are often punctuated with frequent use of the words 'loike' or 'roysh'.
- Ross, in particular, describes women by comparing them to female celebrities. For example "A total Ali Landry", "A bit of a girl-next-door vibe, if your next door neighbour happens to be Cheryl Tweedy."
- Ugly women are often referred to as "moonpigs", "swamp donkeys" and "weapons of mass destruction"
A typical statement from one of Ross' columns is "So there I was, roysh, class legend, schools rugby legend, basically all-round legend, when someone decides you can't, like, sit the Leaving Cert four times. Well that put a focking spanner in the works."
Although the main satirical targets of the columns are affluent South Dublin dwellers, elements of working class culture (sometimes called skanger culture, similar to the British chav phenomenon) are also parodied, again, primarily through language.
- Common exclamations include "Ah Jaysus!", and "(Wat's de) Story, bud?" (which is taken to mean "How are you, my friend?").
- The 'th' sound becomes a 'd' sound: "Wudja looka dat young fella over dare" ("(Would you) Look at that young man over there").
- "The Herald" becomes "The Heddild", "aren't" becomes "arden't", and crime figure "The General" becomes "de gennidel".
- Working class people are sometimes referred to by Ross as "Howiyas" (based on the Dublin accent rendering of "How are you?"), and the women as "Jacintas" or "Natalies" (names perceived to be common among working class Dublin women).
- The term "steamer" is a phrase used by Ross referring to a guy who 'bats for the other team or drives on the wrong side of the road' i.e: is homosexual.
[edit] Characters
Ross Kyle Gibson McBride O'Carroll-Kelly - The protagonist and narrator. His initials, given to him by Tribune journalist Gerard Siggins, are ROCK. This is a double reference - Ross attended the fictional school Castlerock College (a portmanteau of Castleknock College and Blackrock College. Ross is dimwitted, vain and a heartless womaniser. Though Ross performed well in schools rugby, his natural laziness meant that he never progressed in the game as an adult. Ross has a near psychotic contempt for "skangers" or "skobies" (as he refers to a particular group of people in Dublin, the majority of whom reside north of the River Liffey; and "boggers" or "culchies" (as he refers to people from outside the Dublin area). His marriage to Sorcha has done little to hinder his prolific womanising (at least, if his account is to be believed). Once he has had his way with a girl, he rarely replies to her calls or messages, unless he needs to use her for some ulterior purpose.
The reason for Ross' relative economic affluence is the fact that when he was a young boy, his father came into a fortune in a suspiciously short period of time. Criminal links were rumoured, and Charles O'Carroll-Kelly was eventually arrested and convicted of tax evasion and bribing public representatives, and also of accepting bribes while serving as a County Councillor himself. With his millions in tow, his father bought a large estate in the leafy, gilded suburbs of South Dublin from which Ross' D4 lifestyle began.
Charles O'Carroll-Kelly - Ross' father. Ross treats him with contempt, often while obtaining large amounts of money from him. Charles is very proud of his son's rugby skills (Ross' middle names derive from Irish rugby greats Jack Kyle, Mike Gibson and Willie John McBride), and demands the utmost respect for him from sports columnists. Ross' nicknames for him, possibly suggested by his initials, include "Dick-features" and "Knob-head". Remarkably these daily insults seem to fly clear over his head as he readily hands out cash without hesitation. These insults can also be viewed as a homage to Patrick Bateman from American Psycho fame a book which is listed as an inspiration at the start of Ross's journeys. Does his father really ignore this constant hurling of abuse or is the abuse all a figment of Ross's under active imagination. The American Psycho theme is similarly mirrored in Ross's constant description of the clothing worn by his contemporaries. Mr O'Carroll-Kelly is portrayed as an extreme right winger, with little respect for Trade Unions, the environment and state intervention in the economy. He was elected a councillor for Dun Laoghaire in the 2004 local elections. In 2006 he is jailed on corruption charges and currently in Mountjoy jail, where he then manages to turn the prisoners into a rugby team. Mr O Carroll Kelly has an inflated sense of self importance, repeatedly writing to the Irish Times on various issues, convinced that people think of him as a "major captain of industry" and man with his "finger on the pulse of the nation". As well as this, at various times, he has attempted (usually unsuccessfully) to make political statements about what he considers to be important social issues, which usually go completely unnoticed by the public. Note that the family members' initials are all intentional with Ross' spelling ROCK. The parents names are slightly ruder. He is imprisoned when it comes to light that the criminal activity outlined in Fionnuala's novel is in fact a true account of Charles' own life. Fionnuala's novel deals with a woman whose husband is sent to prison, the Criminal Assets Bureau having seized all his assets. Fionnuala's heroine begins a steamy affair with another man.
Interestingly, during the time the senior O'Carroll-Kelly spends in prison, Ross contempt for him diminishes. This corresponds with his father's inability to provide him with seemingly endless resources of finance and his (Charles's) new-found respect for the less fortunate. In essence, this is the first period in their relationship when Ross is unable to prevail upon his father for his every desire to be satisfied. It appears, somewhat counter-intuitively, that Ross respect for his father grows as a result of this.
Fionnuala O'Carroll-Kelly - Ross' mother. Often gets involved in campaigns (such as "Halting Sites Where They're Appropriate") to keep working class and disadvantaged elements out of Foxrock. Much to Ross's horror, she has become a successful author of "chick-lit", with a decidedly steamier approach than Cecilia Ahern. The initials of her name form a lewd joke in Ross-speak. After sending Charles to prison by revealing all their secrets in her novel, Fionnula becomes an extremely successful public figure on foot of her writing. She becomes the new face of crème de la mer Ireland and falls in love with her book agent Lance, causing Ross to despise her even more.
Frank Awder, alias Hennessy Coghlan-O'Hara - Charles' solicitor and friend. He shares Charles' concerns about the working class, and is in trouble with the law for tax evasion. It transpires that "Hennessy" is merely an alias, and his real name is "Frank Awder". This comes as a shock to his daughter Lauren, who is now "Lauren Awder", something that "her old man is not too keen on", as Ross puts it. Hennessy is quite fond of the female natives of South East Asia. Along with Charles, Hennessy is a parody of the mildly corrupt past of Irish life as exposed in the long-running tribunals of Inquiry.
Christian Forde - Ross' oldest friend. An obsessive Star Wars fan, he talks of little else and often merges movie scenes and quotes in to his day-to-day life. He married Hennessy's daughter, Lauren, in 2005. Even though Ross was instrumental in the failure of his parents' marriage by sleeping with his mother, Christian is unshakeably loyal to Ross and is the first to stand by him when trouble starts. However, Christian left for Hollywood, along with Lauren, to join George Lucas's writing team in early 2007.
JP Conroy - A friend of Ross' who prior to 2005 spoke "fluent morkeshing," i.e. marketing. He talked entirely in business slogans and catch phrases. (For example, "Sounds like there's a highly resourced, precisely targeted results drive going down here."). JP harbours an intense superiority complex towards members of the working class and common activities include driving through impoverished areas of Dublin shouting "Affluence", "The breadline" and, "The poverty trap". According to Ross, he is doing an MDB (Managing Daddy's Business) at the fictional estate agent Hook, Lyon and Sinker. However, this all changed during a trip abroad with the other 'goys', when JP embraced Christianity and rejected materialism. He entered the seminary, and was in training for the priesthood. Nicknames currently include JP III. He subsequently had a crisis of faith, partly fuelled by his father's refusal to allow him any religious material, but appears to be recovering and becoming his old self again. He will not be returning to the seminary.
Oisinn Wallace - "One of the goys", a mountain of a man with the stomach of an elephant, as proved following his victory at the annual UCD Iron Stomach eating competition. Deliberately goes out with the ugliest girls. An aspiring perfume creator, he is able to tell exactly what aftershave or perfume his friends are wearing. His "old dear" is a "yummy mummy". He has had huge success marketing his own range of scented holy water.
Fionn de Barra - The only one of Ross' friends with academic ability. Though they respect each other as rugby players from their time on "the 'S'" (Schools senior cup team) together, Ross and Fionn are almost polar opposites of one another, and as a result the pair have often fallen out with one another. Their antipathy is compounded by the fact that Fionn harbours romantic feelings for Sorcha. He is widely rumoured, via the medium of toilet-wall graffiti, to have had an affair with Sorcha and indeed in some rumours to be the father of Ross' second child, Honor. Ross's jealousy about Fionn's infatuation was the catalyst for his marriage proposal to Sorcha. Fionn is now a successful teacher at Castlerock College where he teaches English and History to students including (to Ross's disapproval) Ronan. Fionn's recent heartache at the end of the last book stems from the death of his fiancée Aoife who dies from the eating disorder she suffered from for years bringing the feud between the two men to a close, as both had lost their partners in recent months.
Sorcha Eidemar Françoise O'Carroll-Kelly (née Lalor) - Ross' recurring love interest, and eventually his wife. She is a benevolent character and is concerned with issues such as poverty and various endangered species. Her main interests are shopping and watching Friends, Dawson's Creek and The O.C. Ross repeatedly cheats on her but is possessive of her nonetheless. Her signature scent is Issey Miyake perfume. Sorcha worked for a short period, for Ross's father as a cut-throat human resources manager, helping him to "rationalise" the work-force. She now runs her own boutique in the Powerscourt Centre in Dublin City. She split up with Ross after he slept with their nanny and is currently living with Cillian, an old flame of hers.
Erika - Femme fatale and Sorcha's closest friend during college even though she cannot stand Sorcha's caring nature. Hobbies include horse riding and dating super-rich men. Totally uninterested with the predictable topics her girlfriends talk about (favourite moment in Dawson's Creek, Weight Watchers points etc). Can put down a man with one lash of her tongue and thus became something of a forbidden fruit in Ross' eyes. She repeatedly toys with the idea of seducing Ross (who knows he would be unable to resist), with the sole apparent intention of hurting Sorcha. Erika has been in love with Ross's best friend Christian Forde since she was 15.
Ronan - Ross' illegitimate 8-year old son, who, to Ross' eternal shame, is a prime example of the skanger subculture. Though only a child, he has many criminal connections, and is tipped by his neighbours to become "the next Genoddle", i.e., The General, Martin Cahill. Surprisingly he is the only character in the series who has been able to make Erika smile and - despite the vast social gap between them - she has grown quite fond of him also. In the more recent books with Ronan becoming a sustained character and being widely accepted as the humour of the stories, his adventures have started to take him overseas generally dragging Ross alongside him. The first of these comes as a result of a school trip after Ronan joins Castlerock and becomes Fr. Fehily's bright hope for there rugby future. The trip takes them to France where Ronan vanishes into the Red light district of Pigalle in France forcing Ross to act as a parent and bring him home. While there Ronan calls Ross "Da" for the first time and not something offensive while Ross was thinking about Ronan's earlier statement of becoming a Pimp after uttering the sentence "I think I should get meself a string a' bitches".
Honor - Ross and Sorcha's first child together. Sorcha went into labour at Fionnuala's book party at the end of the last book. Honor initially hated Ross and cried whenever she saw him but now they have a better relationship, even though, due to the split with Sorcha, Ross only sees her on Sundays.
Derek 'One F' Foley - Character based on real-life Irish sports reporter Derek Foley who writes for the tabloid Irish Daily Star, the newspaper variously described by Ross as 'The Paper for Peasants' and the 'Building Site Gazette'. The 'One F' refers to his personalised Star column called 'There is Only One 'F' in Foley' (say it quickly). Their friendship goes back to Foley writing about his Schools Cup heroics and there is a framed copy of the Daily Star with Ross's Cup final hanging on the wall of a nightclub in D'Olier St, Dublin. Ross and One F join together with the 'Echo and the Moneymen' consortium to buy famous nightclub Lillies Bordello.
Father Denis Fehily - Principal of Castlerock College. Rugby is all-important; students on the Senoir Team are excused from all discipline. He intersperses his motivational speeches with quotes from Nazi speeches, which apparently goes unnoticed by even the more intelligent students. (Incidentally, Castlerock's school song is "Castlerock über alles", with parts of the Home and Away theme song inexplicably inserted.) It should be noted that St. Marys College, Dublin (a south side private school based in Rathmines) uses the German marching tune "Erika" in its anthem. He is essentially a propagandist for the students, teaching them that a good education is irrelevant and that they are the elite that will always have the door held open for them no matter what they do in life. Refers to the students and other members of the wealthy ruling class as "Germans". Father Fehily's death causes a ripple throughout Ross's world. At Father Fehily's funeral Ross makes a speech as a man and feels sad over something worthwhile for once. He includes everyone who was on the S in the year they won and makes reference to each of there own personal skills and his lack of any except rugby. While walking out of the church it was the point where each of them knew they were going their own way in life when Ross said "A little bit of us all got buried with that coffin". Father Fehily's final act is the spreading of his ashes in France on the street where he stayed during his time in the war.
[edit] Cultural impact
Ross O'Carroll-Kelly is something of a cultural phenomenon within Ireland, and his name has become a byword for all that is perceived to be wrong in Celtic Tiger Ireland. Though it is largely viewed as satire, there are those who view Ross O'Carroll-Kelly as a role model or an idol. For example, some people have imitated Ross' pastime of driving through disadvantaged areas in expensive cars, shouting "Affluence!" at passers-by. Following Ross' move to The Irish Times, the Irish Independent began a similar column, OMG! featuring a female counterpart to Ross, in its Weekend supplement on 22 September 2007.
[edit] Change of newspaper
The original Sunday Tribune column ended abruptly in July 2007, with the paper simply carrying a notice the issue after it finished, "Ross O'Carroll-Kelly is on holiday". Subsequently it emerged in an interview with Paul Howard in the Irish Independent that Howard had left the newspaper. [2] On 29 August 2007 The Irish Times carried an advertisement for a Ross O'Carroll-Kelly "return" in the Saturday supplement as a weekly column, which began on 1 September 2007.
[edit] Play
Ross has also starred in his very own stage show, "The Last Days of the Celtic Tiger[1]. Ross has to deal with substantially reduced funds as a result of the Revenue having carried out a taxation audit on his Dad (who was his source of funds). The show ran in the Olympia Theatre, Dublin from 8 November – 17 April 2008.
[edit] Future
Another Ross book, Mr. S and the Secret of Andorra's Box, is due to be published in October 2008[2]
[edit] Cover art
[edit] Cover gallery
[edit] Cover art references
In the first four books the covers avoid depicting the face of our main protagonist but this approach has changed since the author signed with Penguin. On the cover of both The Miseducation Years and The Orange Mocha-Chip Frappuccino Years Ross is shown wearing the rugby team jersey of his fictional school, Castlerock College. The various blue and white jerseys Ross is repeatedly depicted as wearing are based on that of the Leinster provincial rugby team while that being worn by his son on the cover of The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Nightdress is based on the Glasgow Celtic soccer club's strip. On the cover of This Champagne Mojito Is The Last Thing I Own is a sawn-off shotgun, a type of weapon commonly associated in Ireland with armed robbery and other criminal activities. Also on this cover his son is shown wearing the Gaelic games county team jersey of Dublin.