Volume > Issue > Walker Percy: The Man & the Movie

Walker Percy: The Man & the Movie

A SCANDALOUS SENSE OF PARTICULARITY

By Ronald Austin | October 1993
Ronald Austin is a Hollywood writer and producer, and Chairman of the New Oxford Review Forum of Southern California. He is currently adapting Walker Percy's The Thanatos Syndrome for the screen.

Walker Percy would have liked the location of the Second Annual Percy Symposium held on March 20, 1993: The Holiday Inn in Covington, Louisiana, is upscale but it might possibly have been the model for the burnt-out motel where Dr. Tom More (in Love in the Ruins) takes refuge in those apocalyptic days when racial and political violence has brought America to its knees. Motels, especially Holiday Inns, meant something to Percy. He has Tom More recall how he and his wife and daughter used to “roar seven hundred miles a day along the great interstates to some glittering lost motel….” Percy often found a kind of epiphany in the mundane.

Today, the Inn is filled with Southern hospitality and graciousness. I recognize Mrs. Walker Percy, called “Bunt,” from her photo. She’s gracious and interested in our plans to adapt her husband’s novel The Thanatos Syndrome to the screen. The Percys’ adopted daughter, Mary Pratt, joins us. She teaches school in an outlying area, and, like her mother, seems to know everyone present, greeting them in that easy, small-town way.

Phin Percy appears. He looks enough like his older brother to give you a sense of the physical presence that accompanied that extraordinary mind. Phin, a former law professor at Tulane, is modest and plainspoken with, one suspects, his brother’s eye for the foolish. Brother Leroy, he ex­plains, was unable to attend. He’s in Mississippi, still managing the Percy lands.

Anne, the Percy’s second and natural child, arrives last. Deaf since birth, she moves comfort­ably among familiar faces, reading lips which offer greetings. She owns the local bookstore which of­fers, among other things, her father’s books and the growing number of books about him. I notice later that she is reading the speeches from provided texts.

Enjoyed reading this?

READ MORE! REGISTER TODAY

SUBSCRIBE

You May Also Enjoy

Homosexuality & the Entertainment Media

The main threats to the family come from infidelity, divorce, and all the temptations of a hedonistic culture.

We Love to Look in the Mirror

Chesterton likened the Titanic to Western culture, “in its power and in its impotence, its security and its insecurity.”

Infinity War: A Call to Action

The final scene of Infinity War is particularly haunting for millennials; a whole third of our generation has been destroyed by abortion.