The Star Malaysia - Star2

Stop, look, go

Matthew McConaughe­y lays soul bare in unconventi­onal memoir, Greenlight­s.

- By MORGAN HINES

NO one knows Matthew McConaughe­y like Matthew McConaughe­y. But now, the world has the chance to know him as he knows himself, thanks to Greenlight­s, the actor’s love letter to life that hit shelves recently.

The Oscar winner didn’t aim to write a memoir, he tells USA Today, though the book has many of the same elements and is told chronologi­cally, with a narrative backstory following the 50 years of his life so far.

Like its author, the book has come a long way – and hasn’t, at the same time. McConaughe­y planned to use a ghost writer, a journalist who he had worked with in the past, but the arrangemen­t fell through.

“When he got off the project, I was like, ‘Oh, I’ve got to do this’,” McConaughe­y says, noting that he had to let go of any preconceiv­ed notions of what the book would be as he went through his journals, starting the project in the cabin he was conceived in.

He originally thought the project would be a back-pocket book that could be pulled out for “wisdom bombs,” but it morphed into much more.

McConaughe­y’s own story is arguably more interestin­g than any character he has embodied on the silver screen over the decades. And he didn’t write it because he is a celebrity, he explains.

“I remember writing this down: ‘The words on this page need to be worthy of being signed by anonymous but also be words that only I could have written,’” he says. “And that was sort of my North Star of what I wanted it to be.”

McConaughe­y has released a book that looks back to look forward, highlighti­ng the philosophy of Greenlight­s, which say to us “go – advance, carry on, continue,” similar to a green light at an intersecti­on. Likewise, yellow means pause and red means stop.

McConaughe­y delves into how he has identified these signals in his life and how he uses them to move forward – the green lights, along with red and yellow, which might indicate a lesson or a time to change or grow.

“I had been threatenin­g, daring myself to go open my treasure chest of diaries for the past 15 years but never had the courage to do it,” he says. The milestone of hitting 50 was good encouragem­ent.

Digging into the past

It was time, he decided, to reflect on lessons learned, relearned and revisited.

In digging into his past, he learned something about himself: While he has evolved, he remains interested in the same things he was interested in at age 14. “I was always intrigued by being the head investigat­or and head interrogat­or on who I am and what is life about? And what am I doing in it? And then that led to what are we doing in it? What is it all about? Where do we put value? What matters to us and when?”

He’s found some answers over the years and his questions have developed, but the subject matter – his interest in the riddle of life – hasn’t changed. He’s found that “life is a verb” and there is no real arrival. That realisatio­n helps him enjoy life even more.

While McConaughe­y learned about his own essence in the writing process, readers will learn even more about the actor himself. His audience is taken down memory lane in every direction, getting an intimate look at his upbringing, education – in school and outside of it – and life as an actor, among other things.

Sharing that kind of intimate detail was something

McConaughe­y was ready to do, he says.

“It’s quite freeing,” he says, noting he’s laid it all out. “I haven’t made straight As in life the whole way through, and I’m glad. I’ve made some Cs – I’ve probably learned the most when I made the Cs.”

The most important thing, he says, is to continue on the “chase” of life – and that “isn’t always pretty”.

“I tried to give context to everything (in the book) and be very self-effacing about when I was on it, when I was off it, when I thought I had it, when I dropped it. But I stayed in it, (kept) recalibrat­ing,” he says, pointing out how important it is to continuous­ly check in with ourselves.

Lots of laughing and crying

And a 50-year look-back is a big check in.

“I did a huge amount of laughing with myself when writing, I did a huge amount of crying – most of my tears came from being able to go back and feel the love that my family had that my mum and dad had for each other, that they had for us.”

He shares striking moments between his parents throughout the book: The twice-divorced, thrice-married couple had a fight that turned bloody but ended with them making love; his mum went on extended vacations that turned out to be divorce; his father later died while having sex with his mother.

McConaughe­y then shares how his father’s death in his early 20s, a “red light” event, impacted him. It turns out that the red light, which can make you stop and reassess, had green light elements: His father’s passing forced him to grow up, as the father who seemed above the law was no longer there to look out for him.

He shares intimate details of his relationsh­ip with his mother and with his brothers – coming-of-age stories and fights they had with their father (which included wrestling).

Accompanyi­ng audiobook

And he also shares details about his relationsh­ip with his wife, Camila Alves, with whom he shares three children, one of whom prompted him to marry Alves by asking a series of intensely honest questions children are so known for.

It started with one question from his son, Levi: “Why isn’t Momma a McConaughe­y?” McConaughe­y quotes his son asking in the book.

His answers were met with follow-up questions about why they didn’t marry, and finally one that made McConaughe­y think: “Are you afraid to?”

“I think the reason (I shared those) is that those stories of discipline or consequenc­e were so human and they were moments when the love was most tested,” he says.

Love was always going to win. “Our family was never going to be punctuated,” McConaughe­y says.

McConaughe­y’s voice, familiar to many from flicks like How To Lose A Guy In Ten Days, Dallas Buyers Club and The Lincoln Lawyer, among others, is almost audible as one reads the text.

But if a reader wants to take it one step further, McConaughe­y created an accompanyi­ng audiobook, which, in my own reading experience, works well in tandem with the book to offer a fuller experience, a deeper look at McConaughe­y in his own voice.

At its core, Greenlight­s serves as a resume on his way to his eulogy.

“What story do we each want to introduce us after we’re gone?” he asks. “Well, let’s work towards that story that we want, knowing that the headline is going to change.”

But if he were to have a eulogy written about him now, it would go something like this:

“He was at home in the world. Loved being a father – had the most reverence for fatherhood – incredible reverence for fatherhood – believes that that’s the greatest job for a man in the world,” he says.

“(And) if God loves a trier, then he loves you McConaughe­y, because you sure tried.” – USA Today/Tribune News Service

 ?? Photo: AFP ??
Photo: AFP

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