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Jokes My Father Never Taught Me: Life, Love, and Loss with Richard Pryor PDF

221 Pages·2006·3.41 MB·English
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JOKES MY FATHER NEVER TAUGHT ME LIFE, LOVE, AND LOSS WITH RICHARD PRYOR RAIN PRYOR WITH CATHY CRIMMINS I dedicate this book to the loving memory of my father, Richard Pryor; to my brothers and sisters, whose voices matter; and to my mother, Shelley—just you and me against the world. CONTENTS INTRODUCTION • 1 1. HOME AT LAST • 5 2. INTRODUCING RICHARD PRYOR • 13 3. THE BROKEN HEARTS CLUB • 37 4. WE ARE FAMILY • 59 5. THE GOD OF COMEDY • 75 6. MAN ON FIRE • 93 7. GET OVER IT • 115 PHOTOGRAPHIC INSERT 8. BEVERLY HILLS HIGH • 131 9. AN ACTOR’S LIFE • 147 10. WEDDING BELLS • 171 11. THE PRISONER • 191 EPILOGUE • 203 ACKNOWLEDGMENTS • 209 ABOUT THE AUTHOR CREDITS COVER COPYRIGHT ABOUT THE PUBLISHER INTRODUCTION Once upon a time, in a Faraway Land, two hippies were sitting around talking about the rain. “Don’t say ‘hippies,’ Rain. It was 1967, and we were Flower Children, not hippies.” “What’s the difference?” “Hippies were dirty. Flower Children were clean and beautiful.” “That’s a stretch.” “Just go with it.” “Okay. I’ll try.” Once upon a time, in a Faraway Land, two Flower Children were sitting around talking about the rain. They lived in a Magic Castle— “Actually, if you’re going to insist on telling the truth, it was a Spanish colonial on Plymouth Street, with brown wall-to-wall shag carpeting. And it’s not even there anymore—they tore it down to make room for an office building.” “Can we focus on the two Flower Children for the time being?” 2 JOKES MY FATHER NEVER TAUGHT ME “It’s your book.” The female Flower Child, born in the enchanted borough ofBrooklyn, was a beautiful Jewish-American princess, with blond hair and blue eyes. “I wasn’t a fucking Jewish Princess—I was a radical in the Army of Peace! I left home when I was in high school and shacked up with a bunch of Cuban Marxists!” And the male was a very handsome Black Prince, who just hap- pened to grow up in a whorehouse. “The motherfucker was handsome—I’ll give him that. But Prince? I don’t think so.” The Prince and Princess met in a bar and took an instant dislike to each other— “Now we’re talking, Rainy. If you’re going to tell the story, tell it like it is.” But they overcame their differences, flew to Las Vegas, and got mar- ried in a tacky little chapel. “Bastard wouldn’t even spring for an Elvis impersonator.” They made love all night and all day, every night and every day, and before long the Jewish Princess was pregnant.” “Sick as a dog, too.” Then one rainy afternoon, while the two of them were sitting at home (on the shag carpet), listening to the rain, it suddenly came to her. “Let’s call her ‘Rain,’ ” she said. “Who?” he said. “The baby!” she said. And the Black Prince perked right up and his eyes went all wide. “Rain!” he said. “Now that’s a good name. I like that name!” “You know, I hate to do this to you, but now that I think about it, maybe it wasn’t the rain after all. Maybe it was the sprinklers.” INTRODUCTION 3 “Mom!” “I’m just trying to be helpful. You said you wanted to tell the truth and nothing but the goddamn truth, and I’m doing my part.” “Well? Was it the sprinklers?” “No, probably not. If it had been the sprinklers, we would have called you ‘Sprinkle.’ ” “Great name for a porn star!” “You know what? It’s coming back to me now. It really was raining. I remember because the windows were all fogged up, and because your father got to his feet and used his finger to write your name in the glass: R-A-I-N.” “Then what?” “What do you mean, Then what? You know what. Life hap- pened, and everything went to shit.” “Not everything, Mom.” “No. I guess you’re right. Not everything.” “I remember good times, too.” “Yeah, so do I. The motherfucker was crazy, but he was never boring.” No, he certainly wasn’t boring. Life with Richard Pryor was one hell of a ride.

Description:
This is a loving yet brutally honest memoir by the daughter of comedy legend Richard Pryor. Rain Pryor was born in the idealistic, free-love 1960s. Her mother was a Jewish go-go dancer who wanted a "tribe of rainbow children," and her father was Richard Pryor, perhaps the most compelling and brillia
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