FROM THE
MAGAZINE OCTOBER 2017 ISSUE
How Jeremy Irons Rescued and Restored a
15th-Century Irish Castle
In the midst of a creative crisis, the British actor
impulsively purchased Kilcoe Castle, a long-abandoned fortress near the water.
David Kamp learns how a magical retreat came to be.
BY DAVID
KAMP
PHOTOGRAPHY
BY SIMON UPTON
SEPTEMBER
19, 2017
https://www.vanityfair.com/style/2017/09/inside-kilcoe-castle-jeremy-irons-irish-castle
Somewhere
between Ballydehob and Skibbereen, the G.P.S. directed me down a narrow country
road toward an indentation in the southwestern Irish coast called Roaringwater
Bay. The castle I was looking for had been one of the last to fall to the
English, in the early 1600s, in a coda to the historic Battle of Kinsale, which
sealed Elizabethan England’s conquest of Gaelic Ireland. The Crown’s forces had
approached on horseback and by sea, with muskets, swords, and malevolent
intent. I was approaching by appointment, in a white Kia Sportage. The road
meandered this way and that until suddenly, around the last bend, a spectacular
sight presented itself: Kilcoe, a terra-cotta-colored edifice composed of two
towers, a thick one and a thin one, rising from a small island tethered to the
mainland by a short causeway.
I was
detected even before I reached the island. Through a slit window some 50 feet
in the air—the kind from which men in metal helmets used to shoot arrows—a
small white dog peered quizzically at my vehicle. At the castle’s gates, I got
out of the car and buzzed the buzzer. A disembodied voice dictated a numerical
code to use on the keypad. I punched in the numbers, and the gates slowly
opened.
Twenty
years ago, this place had been a ruin. Old photos I had seen depicted a
run-down structure of weathered gray stone, roofless, its uppermost surviving
floor exposed to the elements and covered in a carpet of grass and wild
shrubbery. But this morning, Kilcoe cut a mighty figure, its main tower
standing 65 feet tall, and the turret, conjoined to its sibling at the
northeast corner, 85 feet. The crenellations in the towers’ parapets had been
reconstructed to approximate how they must have looked in the 15th century,
when the castle was built by a chieftain of the Clan Dermot MacCarthy. A
burgundy pennant emblazoned with the word KILCOE streamed northwesterly from
the turret’s lookout.
In the
courtyard, I walked up to an imposing arched door, its heavy elm panels dotted
with iron studs. Above it, to the left, inlaid in the wall, was a pale stone
slab. Etched into the slab were the following words:
MANY HEARTS
LIE IN THESE WALLS.
FOUR YEARS
WE WORKED, AND WE
JUST DID
THE BEST WITH WHAT WE KNEW.
AND WHAT WE
DID YOU SEE.
A.D. 2002
Just as I
began to wonder if my knocks on the big door were being heard, a smaller,
hitherto unnoticed cutout door within the big door popped open, and through the
opening bent the lanky body and familiar face of Jeremy Irons. It was an
entrance evocative of Gene Wilder’s halting, hobbled first appearance in Willy
Wonka & the Chocolate Factory: Irons looked ashen as he beckoned me in and
led the way, with a conspicuous limp, up a flight of outdoor stairs. Had living
in this remote locale turned the handsome actor into a rickety invalid?
No, false
alarm. Irons informed me that he had only recently awoken and was in momentary
foot pain from a flare-up of plantar fasciitis. Within minutes, having drunk a
mugful of coffee and smoked the first of the many hand-rolled cigarettes he
goes through in a day, he had, like Wonka, unfurled into his full, charismatic
self, ready to expound on a magical world born of his imagination.
“I remember
the very first night I spent here on my own,” he said. “It’s a very interesting
building, because it’s very male and erect: a phallus. And yet, within, it’s a
womb. Very strange like that. And I thought, I’m completely protected. I’m away
from everything. It’s a wonderful feeling. And that’s what it gives me.”
Irons, I
learned after two days at his side, is a man serenely comfortable in his own
skin. He speaks without inhibition and does whatever he feels like doing,
whether it’s sailing his yawl, the Willing Lass, heedlessly through the stiff
gales of Roaringwater Bay, driving the local roads in his pony trap (his
preferred, Anglo-Irish term for a horse-drawn carriage), or interrupting his
houseguests’ sleep with theatrical wake-up announcements delivered through the
intercom system that he rigged up to reach all the rooms in the castle. At the
time of my visit, he had two friends staying over, both women. “Good morning,
ladies!,” he intoned through the intercom, his plummy Jeremy Irons voice
echoing throughout the ancient building. “It’s a lovely day. The sky is dry;
the wind is low. Please come down to the smell of burning toast.”
His country
uniform was a loose-weave three-button sweater worn over a Henley shirt, with
baggy French workman’s trousers in a blue herringbone pattern and slip-on duck
boots paired with red ragg-wool socks. Outdoors, he completed this ensemble
with a backward-turned tweed cap. On any other human being save Samuel L.
Jackson, this outfit would have looked ridiculous. On him, it looked smashing.
Kilcoe is
at once stately-home beautiful and slightly mad—a 360-degree immersion in its
owner’s eccentric psyche.
His body
language, too, is something to behold. At 69, he has held on to his looks and
still leans against walls and sprawls across sofas with the languid grace of
Charles Ryder, the character he played in Brideshead Revisited, the 1981
British mini-series that sealed his stardom. What’s more, he has a dog, Smudge,
who mimics his regal movements. A terrier mix procured by Irons from a
shelter—it was she who first spotted me pulling up to the castle—Smudge
accompanied Irons everywhere we went (with her master’s constant reinforcement:
“There’s a good girl, Smudger!”) and followed his every cue: casting her glance
pensively seaward when he did, matching him pace for pace as he bounded up
Kilcoe’s steep staircases.
A man would
need to be this self-assured in order to take on the daunting task of restoring
a castle that had sat unoccupied for the better part of 400 years. And he would
have to be especially trusting in his instincts—and, perhaps, a little
reckless—to assume direct oversight of the project, as Irons did, with no
credentialed architect, general contractor, or medievalist at his side.
“It was a
load of amateurs setting to, following our noses,” Irons said. At any given
moment, he told me, 30 to 40 people were puttering away on the premises—a
motley assemblage of personal friends, Irish locals, and itinerant masons,
woodworkers, and other craftsmen. “I told them all,” he said, “‘What you need
to remember is that what we’re doing is a jazz theme on the medieval.’”
If that
phrase conjures unwelcome images of suits of armor draped in animal-print
throws while the music of Kenny G tootles faintly through hidden speakers,
despair not. Kilcoe, while not remotely a faithful re-creation of what it was
600 years ago—it offers such modern features as hot and cold running water,
electricity, and Wi-Fi—is a magnificent place: at once stately-home beautiful
and slightly mad, a 360-degree immersion in its owner’s eccentric psyche.
The
castle’s showpiece is its double-height main living area, located on the third
of the main tower’s four floors and known in medieval manor-house terminology
as the solar (in Irons’s pronunciation, the “so-lahr”).
Making use
of the big tower’s full width and depth, roughly 32 feet by 40, the room is
pleasingly busy, assimilating all manner of art, objets,and materials that
Irons has collected, magpie-like, in his travels: carpets from Morocco, a
Nepalese yoke for leading around a camel, an old Roman-style threshing board
known as a tribulum, a fiddle he had made in Slovakia (he dabbles in playing),
a life-size antique wooden horse that he found in the Cotswolds but believes to
have originally come from an American tack shop.
The solar
benefits from a surprising amount of natural light, given how monolithic and
fortress-like Kilcoe appears from the outside. The room’s tall, oblong windows,
refurbished by Irons but unchanged in their positioning, are aligned to offer
views that look out, as confirmed by my iPhone’s compass, precisely to the
north, south, east, and west.
At the
center of the room, beneath a wrought-iron chandelier from France, is a
conversation pit bounded by a large hearth and two sofas upholstered becomingly
in celadon-colored cloth (“Liberty’s of London with the fabric on backwards”).
Overlooking the solar on all four sides is a gallery, which supplies still more
living space: on its western side, a library-cum-office for Irons, and, on its
eastern side, an intimate den with a grand piano, a woodstove, and a TV nook
(though Irons, not a big fan of television, keeps his flat-screen hidden behind
a slide-up painting of the quarry in nearby Castlehaven, from which much of the
stone for Kilcoe’s restoration was procured).
The castle
sleeps 13 people, with most of the bedrooms and bathrooms tucked away in the
five-story turret. Irons’s master suite is the exception, built atop the solar
and gallery, a sort of deluxe captain’s quarters whose elaborate, arching wood
roof—”I love it because it’s like being inside an upturned boat” he said—is
inspired by the attic of a circa-A.D.-1100 farmhouse in which he spent some
time while making the film The Man in the Iron Mask in France.
“It’s a
very interesting building,” said Irons, “because it’s very male and erect: a
phallus. And yet, within, it’s a womb.”
Fittingly
for the adopted residence of an actor, Kilcoe comes inbuilt with drama. To
reach the solar from the entry level, one must ascend the castle’s main
staircase, which is long, narrow, and steeply pitched. Irons pointed out a
series of holes notched in the walls on both sides, at about head height. These
were for crossbeams from which wooden panels could swing down, impeding an
invader’s progress up the steps. “You’d be coming up, wanting to get in,” Irons
explained to me from the top landing, “and I’d have a lance or poker, which
could push you in the eye from above.” Smudge, at his ankle, glared downward
accordingly.
So, how did
an Irish castle that had been both conquered and effectively abandoned by the
English come to be restored to its former glory by, of all people, an
Englishman?
Twenty
years ago, Irons told me, he found himself restless, in need of a challenge. “I
relish risk,” he said. “Risk is extra life.” For a long time, his acting work
satisfied this need. He enjoyed working with the pervy, iconoclastic film
directors David Cronenberg and Barbet Schroeder, playing twin gynecologists in
the former’s Grand Guignol horror-thriller Dead Ringers and winning an Oscar
for his portrayal of the aristocratic Claus von Bülow (who had been accused of
trying to murder his wife, Sunny) in the latter’s Reversal of Fortune.
But by the
late 1990s he had grown bored with film acting and felt he had plateaued
career-wise, especially given his steadfast refusal to move to Los Angeles, a
city he has no love for. A few years earlier, he and his wife, the actress
Sinéad Cusack, had bought a modest getaway cottage that sits along the river
Ilen, which winds through the western part of Ireland’s County Cork. They fixed
up the cottage and named it Teach Iasc, Irish for Fish House. (The couple make
their main home in Oxfordshire, England.) With their two young sons, Sam and
Max, they spent many a day exploring nearby islands and waterways by boat. The
ruin of Kilcoe, about 10 minutes away, became a favorite picnicking spot, where
Irons and the boys enjoyed scampering up the walls to view the bay from
perilous heights.
Around 1997
the thought occurred to him that he might look into buying Kilcoe and bringing
it back to life. Doing so would present precisely the sort of challenge that he
craved. Furthermore, he had just completed Lolita, Adrian Lyne’s film
adaptation of Vladimir Nabokov’s ever radioactive novel of a teacher’s affair
with a pubescent girl, “so,” Irons dryly told me, “I knew things would be
slower.”
The more he
contemplated Kilcoe, the more urgent became the notion of owning it. The influx
of foreign investment that was to make Ireland temporarily flush at the turn of
the century—transforming it into the so-called Celtic Tiger—was newly under
way, and Irons was fearful, he said, “that someone would come along with too
much money and mess the place up.” Some discreet inquiries were made, and,
before the year was out, Kilcoe was his.
In Cusack’s
amused recollection, Irons had already bought the castle by the time he got
around to telling her. “I was very shocked, and hyperventilated immediately,”
she told me by phone from Oxfordshire. (She was not at Kilcoe when I visited.)
“I’m still hyperventilating, to this day,” she said, “both at the beauty of
what he’s done and because of the amount of breath it takes to get from the
bottom of the stairs to the top.”
But she was
supportive of her husband’s endeavor. It was no coincidence, Cusack noted, that
Irons, who was born in 1948, was soon to turn 50. “I did see it very much as
Jeremy’s midlife crisis, and that he should get on with it,” she said. “Also, I
understood where the need came from. Jeremy can’t bear waste. He can’t throw
things out. I think he saw that castle as a beautiful ruin that needed to be
saved, that needed not to die.”
Irons
furnished me with a three-page memoirette of his involvement with Kilcoe that
provides useful context. There was a time, long ago, when he was young and not
so self-confident: an accountant’s son from the Isle of Wight who, even after
he took the audacious step in his teens of pursuing an actor’s life, still felt
he needed someone “to draw me out from the cold, passionless Anglo-Saxon that I
feared I was,” he writes.
That
someone turned out to be a young woman from a celebrated family of Irish
actors, “my girl from Dublin, wild, raucous, damaged, and quite quite lovely.”
Cusack, to whom Irons has been married since 1978, succeeded in loosening him
up, but even she, as a Dubliner, knew little of rural, distant West Cork. It
was while visiting their friend David Puttnam, the English film producer and
former head of Columbia Pictures, that they first laid eyes upon the dwelling
that became Teach Iasc; Puttnam had just restored a farmhouse nearby.
As Irons
relates, he came to understand that West Cork represents the end of the “hippie
trail”: an informal pathway through the South of England, Wales, and Ireland
that, for decades, has been hitchhiked, motorcycled, and camper-vanned (with a
ferry ride thrown in) by European adventurers of bohemian proclivity.
“Painters, carpenters, acupuncturists, songwriters, restaurateurs, stonemasons,
mechanics, thatchers, weavers, jewelers,” he writes. “The list was endless for
this group that was accepted with kind amusement by the indigenous farmers and
fishermen, who gave us all the umbrella title of ‘blow-in.’”
Irons and
Puttnam were posh versions of blow-ins, but blow-ins nonetheless. Through
Puttnam, Irons became acquainted with another of their kind, a renowned English
architect named Wycliffe Stutchbury, who lived in a nearby fishing village
called Union Hall. Known as Winky, Stutchbury had overseen the renovation of
Puttnam’s house, and, before long, was doing the same for Irons and Cusack. His
work was not yet complete when, one fateful day while on vacation in the South
of France, Winky Stutchbury stood up in a restaurant, declaimed, “I am now
going to speak ex cathedra: The most important thing in the world is love!,”
and promptly collapsed, dying instantly at the table at the age of 65.
Among those
Stutchbury left behind was a daughter, Bena, whom he had taken on as a trainee,
intending to teach her everything he knew about architectural draftsmanship.
Bena dutifully wrote Irons a letter notifying him of her father’s passing and
absolving him of any further obligation to be a client; she’d had all of 12
weeks’ training. But Irons admired Bena’s innate ability and personal style.
She was a motorcyclist, as Irons is, and he insisted that she finish the
cottage project. Which she did, much to Irons and Cusack’s liking.
When, a few
years later, Irons confided to Bena Stutchbury his desire to buy Kilcoe, she
informed him of a coincidence: the current owner of the castle and the island
upon which it sat was a cousin of hers. As it turned out, this cousin, Mark
Wycliffe Samuel, was an archaeologist who was in the process of completing a
doctoral thesis, “The Tower Houses of West Cork,” rooted in his own deep
affinity for Kilcoe. Samuel proved amenable to selling the castle to Irons.
The hard
work of making Kilcoe habitable again began in 1998 and took six years,
wrapping up in 2004. (Irons’s lyrical “Many hearts lie in these walls” paean to
this process went up a couple of years before the job was truly complete.)
Stutchbury, her slender résumé notwithstanding, was brought in as Irons’s de
facto architect, H.R. department, and administrator. For the position of
project foreman, Irons brought in Brian Hope, his go-to man since the 1980s for
the upkeep of his Oxfordshire house.
An affable
Englishman with the shaggy, mischievous mien of an old Led Zeppelin roadie with
tales to tell, Hope told me that he was undaunted by Irons’s ambition. “I told
Jeremy, ‘It’s a great idea—off we go!’” he said. Like Irons and Stutchbury, he,
too, owed his qualifications to life experience rather than any accrediting
organization. A blacksmith’s son and a photographer by training, Hope had
picked up various trade skills while knocking around Europe and America as a
young man—for example, working in the 70s with George Harrison’s longtime
assistant, Terry Doran, to build a rock-band rehearsal studio in Los Angeles.
Still, Hope
was shrewd enough to recognize that the scope of the Kilcoe project would
require Irons to buy, rather than rent, their equipment and materials: tiers of
scaffolding, a crane, a generator, a forklift. He also set up a work yard in
the field that bordered the causeway. “We built a blacksmith’s workshop, a
stonemason’s workshop, and a carpentry workshop, and had teams of guys working
away,” Hope said. The land was leased by Irons from his new neighbor, a farmer
who, according to the actor, soon “took to telling friends that he was ‘the
most important man in Jeremy Irons’s life.’”
It didn’t
take long for word to get out in West Cork that Jeremy Irons—yes, that one—was
restoring a castle, and hiring, no less. A steady stream of visitors trekked
their way to Kilcoe, some of them seasoned tradesmen, some of them hippie-trail
pilgrims simply keen to earn some cash or become part of the scene. Hope was
careful to hire licensed professionals to handle the plumbing and the wiring.
But Irons, for all the specificity of his vision, was remarkably open-minded
about giving the randos a chance to contribute. It was Stutchbury, whose office
was a trailer parked at the causeway’s entrance, who served as Team Kilcoe’s
first point of contact with the various characters who showed up.
“Anybody
who wanted a job, I’d ask, ‘What can you do?’” she told me. “A lot of them
couldn’t do anything. They were just . . . people. But, knowing Jeremy’s taste,
I would ask, ‘Are you a motorcyclist or a musician?’ If you were, you’d be
moved up on the list. Or if you had a silly name. There was a painter who came
and said his name was Anthony Cumberbatch. Jeremy said, ‘I have to have him on
my payroll. Hire him!’”
The least
skilled of the new arrivals were given jobs sweeping the scaffolding, or, in
the early days, simply pulling out the vegetation and earth lodged between the
walls’ stones, a laborious process that needed to get done before repointing
could begin. Some of the people who materialized turned out to be gifted
artisans, if offbeat ones. There was the pair of Germans who happened along the
road one day in stovepipe hats and tailcoats, observing an archaic rite known
as Wanderjahr, in which apprentice craftsmen, upon completing their training,
spend several years journeying and improving upon their craft, their costumes
conveying to potential employers that they are not vagabonds. One of the
Germans was a carpenter and the other a stonemason. “They carved all our
figurative windows, and then, after six months, they were off,” said Irons.
There was
an English sculptor-slash-flautist who, because he was a practicing Buddhist,
carved the castle’s Sheela na gig—a gargoylish female figure with splayed legs
and exaggeratedly large genitalia, often found above the entryways of medieval
Irish buildings—in a style more Asian than Irish, with a Buddha-like potbelly.
There was the emotionally unsteady but sublimely skilled Argentinean carpenter
who did intricate, wavy woodwork on and around the toilet in Irons’s private
bathroom—but worked so deliberately that he had to be let go. (And burst into
tears upon receiving the news.)
For all the
hiccups, the renovation process fell into a steady rhythm, sometimes to
transportive effect. “I’d hear the tap-tap-tapping of people picking stone, and
the sounds of giggles and people making jokes,” Stutchbury said, “and I
thought, This must be very like living in medieval mode.” At many a workday’s
end, Irons and Hope, both hobby guitarists, would join their fellow
musician-workers for an acoustic jam session at the pub up the road.
Irons did
sometimes exasperate the crew with his whims and demands. When he told the
stonemasons that their first pass at the main tower’s crenellations was a bit
off, the “teeth” too many in number, and too small—necessitating their
demolition and a rebuild—one Irish mason looked him in the eye and said,
“Jeremy, do you know what the problem with working for actors is? The feckin’
rehearsals.”
But
generally his instincts proved sharp. Early on, Irons noticed twig-like
striations in the mortar on the barrel-vaulted ceiling of the main tower’s
second floor, which is now a game room occupied by a large snooker table. Doing
some research, Irons learned that, in medieval times, builders formed arched
ceilings by bending into place a series of large wicker panels made of pliant,
weaving-friendly woods such as hazel and willow, and holding these panels aloft
from below with strong timber posts. The builders would then lay stones and
mortar above the panels. Once the mortar squeezed through the woven panels and
dried, the arches would hold themselves, and the underlying timber posts were
removed. This backstory warmed Irons to the idea of using wicker panels as a
decorative element throughout Kilcoe. He found a German-born weaver based in
Cork, Katrin Schwart, to make such panels for the game room’s ceiling, and the
results proved so spectacular that Schwart’s ornate wickerwork is now a motif
throughout the castle, appearing on guest-bedroom ceilings, in the headboard of
Irons’s own bed, and even on the outer frame of his bathtub.
The
castle’s color, too, was an Irons inspiration. The original thought was to
leave Kilcoe’s exterior much as it appeared, as a fortress of gray stone. But
no amount of pointing and repointing could keep the castle’s interior dry. Even
though the walls are about five feet deep, the high winds that accompany the
winter rains in Roaringwater Bay resulted in “a puddle the size of a car in the
solar,” Stutchbury said. So the walls needed to be harled, to use the Scottish
term: covered in a thick layer of lime mortar. On top of the harling went
several coats of limewash, a mixture of water and calcium oxide. Irons first
tried applying the limewash in a cream color, but it made the castle “look a
bit like a vibrator,” he said. In the end, he had the outermost coats of
limewash mixed with iron sulfate, a compound that goes on pale green but turns
rust-colored with oxidation.
“Jeremy can’t bear waste,” said his wife, Sinéad
Cusack. “I think he saw that castle as a beautiful ruin that needed to be
saved.”
For a time
in the early aughts, English and Irish newspapers made a scandal of Kilcoe’s
new finish, with a Telegraph reporter claiming that the locals were angry at
the castle’s “sudden transformation from weathered gray to warm pink.” Irons
dismisses these stories as nonsense, and, besides, even at dusk, with the
twilight sky working its spell, you’d have to be lysergically loaded to
construe the building’s color as pink. In the years since, Irons’s
ocher-rust-whatever-you-like-to-call-it version of Kilcoe has become a beloved
West Cork landmark, its warm coloring and bayside positioning making it look as
if it sits in a perpetual golden twilight.
For my
second and final night at Kilcoe, Irons arranged a big dinner in the solar,
with mussels harvested from the bay (the waters are scored with floats and
longlines that hold ropes upon which the mollusks grow), a roaring fire, a
large collection of guests, and an entertainer, the Irish fiddler Frankie
Gavin.
Irons had
exchanged his pullover for an embroidered, floor-skirting scarlet robe, which
he wore with aplomb, as if it were the most normal thing in the world for an
Englishman approaching 70 who lives in a medieval Irish castle to be wearing.
(He has two such robes, the other one, in green, given to him by Hamid Karzai,
the former president of Afghanistan, “after I congratulated him on being the
only national leader who seemed to dress with any flair.”) Two of his guests
were older Irish gents, veterans of Kilcoe’s restoration: Tim Collins, the
project’s gregarious, worldly electrician, and James Whooley, a soft-spoken
retired farmer who has spent his whole life in the area and took on a second
career as Team Kilcoe’s crane operator—it was he who carefully maneuvered the
piano and wooden horse up and over the castle’s roof, whereupon others in the
crew lowered the objects through a hatchway in the floor of Irons’s bedroom.
(“No margin for error on the horse job,” Collins told me. “It cost
£14,000—sterling!”)
After we
had finished eating, Irons asked his guests to gather around in the
conversation pit, where Gavin played a couple of songs and told a few groaners.
Irons jumped in to tell a few of his own. Collins stood up, pre-emptively
apologized for his singing voice, and delivered a heartfelt a cappella version
of “The Banks of My Own Lovely Lee,” Cork’s de facto county anthem. Even the
slight, shy Whooley performed a set piece, a from-memory recitation of “The
Priest’s Leap,” a 74-line Irish-nationalist poem held dear in Cork, about a
defiant cleric who, on horseback, miraculously evades a pursuing battalion of
nefarious English soldiers. Irons, in his flowing robe, took it all in
mirthfully, having evidently banished forever the cold, passionless Anglo-Saxon
part of himself.
Outside, it
was a stormy night, with lashing rain and flattening winds. But you wouldn’t
have known this inside Kilcoe, where the fire crackled, the hum of conversation
drowned out the gusts, and the towers didn’t even sway. “There’s something
about the castle that generates the most extraordinary energy,” Irons said to
me. “Everybody stays up ‘til three, four in the morning—talking, listening to
music, drinking. You just want to go on, go on. It takes a bit of getting used
to, this place. Because it does somehow produce an energy. Have you felt it?”
David Kamp
David Kamp
has been a Vanity Fair contributing editor since 1996, profiling such
monumental figures of the arts as Johnny Cash, Lucian Freud, Sly Stone, and
John Hughes. He has also been responsible for many of the magazine’s recurring
humor features, such as the Rock, Film, and Food Snob’s Dictionaries (which
have in turn been developed into books and Condé Nast Entertainment videos) and
the Impossible Interview series. Kamp is also the author of the best-selling
The United States of Arugula (Broadway Books, 2006), a chronicle of America’s
evolving foodways. Before joining Vanity Fair, he was an editor and writer at
GQ, and began his career at the satirical monthly Spy. He lives in New York
City.
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