Mulu Maguydan

Page 12

My Relative, GW (George Wayne): author/journalist, former celebrity columnist for Vanity Fair magazine Lumina Kay | Year 10 Q: What was growing up in a big family like and how do you think it shaped you?

A: We were the best family ever! I don’t think any of us thought we were a big family. It was only six of us and the two boys were away at boarding school from the age of twelve. So, my sisters were the only ones (mostly) at home. It was six of us, plus Percy, who was the most incredible houseman, gardener and cook my mother had employed to help her out. Only Mum would be smart enough to hire a houseman who could not only do housework, but yard work as well. Percy was amazing. We had the most incredible childhood, especially growing up in the Caribbean. Hopefully one day your mum could take you kids.

Q: What is your favourite interview?

A: My favourite interview will always be with the Hollywood A-List superstar Mark Wahlberg, who I still consider one of my closest friends today. Q: What’s the hardest part about journalism?

A: The hardest thing about being a writer is when you have writer’s block or are just too lazy to put pen to paper. But when the deadline is absolute like this one, you get it done!

Q: What is your favourite thing about home?

A: My favourite thing about my tiny home in Manhattan, West Village, is waking up every morning and being thankful that I am still here and still feel okay, going into my shower with my favourite radio station Q103 blaring from the radio in my bathroom and I shower and meditate and get the best ideas while dreaming. The shower beating on my head is actually like being under the Dunn’s River Falls in Ocho Rios. Another must if you ever visit Jamaica! Q: Who was your biggest inspiration in terms of writing?

A: My biggest inspiration as a writer all came from my amazing father, who I couldn’t wait to come home to every day so I could get the Daily Gleaner newspaper from his Samsonite attaché case and his weekly ‘TIME Magazine’, international edition, which he always brought home from work. My love and my career all began with my dad coming home with the newspapers and the foreign magazines. True story! Q: When did you know you’d ‘made it’?

A: I realised I had made it when I first became famous! I was seventeen years old and on the Munro College championship quiz team of JBC Schools Challenge (which is a legendary live TV show in Jamaica). Being on Schools Challenge is like being on American Idol, but only for smart people! It’s a high school quiz bowl competition the whole country tuned into back in the day. In 1977 and 1978, our team made it to the finals two years in a row! This was my first brush with being ‘famous’. I was getting fan mail from people writing to me because I was the quiz team star, and all the boys who used to try to bully me as a freshman all wanted to be my best friend when I was on the quiz team. The first time I became internationally famous was when Claudia Schiffer, a famous supermodel, sued me for 30 million dollars in 1992, all because I printed a triptych of her in my artisanal, home-made ‘zine called ‘R.O.M.E.’ Today, it’s a collected and cherished magazine of the definitive ‘90s counter-culture avantgarde of New York City. An issue of ‘R.O.M.E.’ was the subject of an NFT Auction in Miami Beach late last year. Q: What was your first interview like?

A: My first celebrity interview was with Iman for my column ‘Resident Alien’ for the Jamaica Daily Gleaner. 12/Mulu Maguydan

Q: How did you get started in the business? Did you have problems with being taken seriously? A: No one takes you seriously when you don’t have produced and published work to show them. So, I started R.O.M.E. and that catapulted my career! Q: When did you know that this was the right job for you?

A: The right job for anyone is doing a job you love doing so it never feels like a job. That’s advice for everyone. Do what you love doing, Andy Warhol once said, and you will be able to make a living from it! Q: Do you think you’ve influenced other POC to follow in your footsteps?

A: GW has influenced many! Nothing makes me feel older or happier than when some kid tells me they moved to New York to pursue their dream just from reading my interviews in Vanity Fair for 24 years. Q: Do you have any exciting plans coming up/to look forward to?

A: I am once again in creative fecund and so grateful and so thankful that my Act III is shaping up to be as #epic as I keep dreaming it will be! Lots of exciting creative genius continuously flowing, and I pray to God to keep me healthy and make the rest of my family even more proud!


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Acknowledgements

1min
page 40

Me and My Great-Great-Grandparents, Francis and Ella Woibo by Amaya Bowen

4min
pages 38-39

My Aunty, Auntie Lou by Charli Jones

9min
pages 36-37

My Dad, George Nona by Robyne Nona

3min
page 35

Me, My Grandfather and My Grandmother by Shemyliah Ahmat

2min
page 34

My Mother, Kerri-Lee Larsen by Kyara Bashforth-Harmston

1min
page 33

Incursion: Reconciliation Week Art Workshop

1min
page 29

My Aunty, Kerry Parker by Sharlotte Parker-Barry

4min
page 32

Original Poetry Works by Charlea Smith

4min
pages 30-31

Incursion: Writers’ Workshop

1min
page 28

My Uncle, ‘Dad’ Laurie Nona by Ella Nona

2min
page 27

My Parents, Anita Yamashita and Michael Nona by Gina Yamashita

2min
page 19

My Grandmother, Dianne Marshall by Tamara Harrison

1min
page 17

My Sister, Kealey Griffiths by Bella Griffiths

4min
page 18

My Grandfather, Athe Walter Nona Snr by Sofia Nona

8min
pages 24-26

My Great-Grandmother, Aka Kailang by Chantay Turner

7min
pages 14-15

Excursion: Queensland Museum and State Library

1min
page 13

My Grandmother, Moilang Rosilind Annie Ware by Cheyanne Yamashita

3min
page 16

My Relative, GW by Lumina Kay

4min
page 12

My Dad, Augustine David by Bella David

4min
page 5

My Nana, Jacqui Carter O’Leary by Chelsea Bashforth-Harmston

1min
page 10

My Grandmother, Regina Turner by Aaliyah Turner

2min
page 4

Introduction by Margot Shave

1min
page 3

My Dad, Frank Loban by Dulcie Loban

1min
page 7

My Great-Grandfather, Ali Drummond by Frances Drummond

5min
pages 8-9

My School Housemother, Sue Trevor by Elyne Tighe

2min
page 11

My Uncle, David Miller by Ally Ellard

3min
page 6
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Mulu Maguydan by St Margaret's Anglican Girls School - Issuu