n LITTLe SLIceS of The BIG eaSy
Transcription
n LITTLe SLIceS of The BIG eaSy
CULTURE GM Little Slices of the Big Easy By Donna Gable Hatch n ew Orleans, situated more than a 100 miles from the mouth of the Mississippi River, is the site of a lot of history - and even more intrigue - and for author Robert Moore Woolfolk Jr, it holds the roots of his childhood. In his memoire, “Little Slices of the Big Easy,” the 91-year-old Woolfolk offers a glimpse into what life was like for a small boy growing up in the Crescent City in the 1930s and ’40s. 62 | GALVESTON MONTHLY | FEBRUARY 2015 “I started writing it about 25 years ago, while I was traveling around the world on business for Standard Oil California - I was a chemical engineer - and remembering all the things I did when I was little,” said Woolfolk, who founded one of the largest managed healthcare companies of the Southwest, The National Healthcare Alliance. “I wrote some of it in Saudi Arabia, some in Guam and so forth.” The book is a collection of 39 short stories that centers on the funny and “sassy” childhood exploits of Woolfolk and his crew of friends dubbed “The White Corpuscles” (“We read that white corpuscles protect against both infectious disease and foreign invaders.”). “Growing up in New Orleans was quite an experience, especially at that time, because parents didn’t pay a lot of attention to what kids got into,” the author said. “We didn’t restrain ourselves. We did some pretty sassy things and got into some mischief, but we did have some fun - a lot of fun - and we got away with it.” Woolfolk was part of a wealthy and influential family: His father, Robert Moore Woolfolk, was a stockbroker at one of the largest firms in the city, and his mother, Ruth Woolfolk, wrote a mustread column titled “Through the Lorgnette” for The Times‑Picayune. As such, the only child had a front row seat -literally - to some of the city’s most dazzling events, including Mardi Gras Carnival Balls. “My dad was a member of one of the older New Orleans Krewes, and when I was six years old, the all-male Krewe needed a Page to follow the Queen at the ball and attend to her train,” Woolfolk said. “Well, they asked me to do it. The Carnival Ball was held in the New Orleans Auditorium, and there must have been four hundred people there. It was something. I was doing a good job for a while, but then the King asked me to bring him a glass of champagne,