Note: I am posting this article with Robert Bott's permission.
Irish-Canadian author Brian Brennan
drew readers into Alberta’s past… and his own
By Robert Bott
Brian Brennan: Musician. Husband. Father. Broadcaster. Journalist. Strike leader. Biographer. Historian. Novelist. Born Oct. 4, 1943, in Dublin, Ireland; died Feb. 21, 2021, in Calgary, aged 77.
Brian Brennan’s book launches drew crowds. Calgarians expected
perceptive prose after his 25 years with the Calgary Herald as a reporter,
critic, feature writer, and columnist, and they enjoyed his deep voice with its
light brogue and careful diction, instantly recognizable from CBC Radio appearances.
He was an entertaining and informative storyteller—and there might be a song or
two.
His 13 books included three major biographies, a memoir, a
history of the Calgary Public Library, a novel, and seven collections of
Alberta stories and profiles. The biographies reflected the depth and breadth
of his diverse interests.
Brian was equally talented in music. His bass vocals and
fluency on piano, organ, and accordion provided his income for several
stretches after he landed in Canada. He began playing professionally in Dublin
at age 14 for church choirs, weddings, and funerals. His last public
performance was accompanying his vocalist daughter Nicole (Nico) Brennan in Calgary
on March 12, 2020, just before Covid-19 struck. “I always thought it was neat
the way his performance life and his writing life were so intimately entwined,”
Nico said after his passing.
Brian grew up in middle-class Dublin and Cork, the son of a
tax official and a schoolteacher, and was educated by Christian Brothers in
English and Gaelic. Unable to afford university, he became a minor functionary
in Customs and Excise, while playing music on the side. After three years, he
got paid leave to attend University College Dublin, supposedly studying
administration but in fact hanging out with the “arts crowd” discussing
literature and music.
In 1966, he and a friend decided to try their luck abroad.
They chose Canada because it welcomed immigrants and provided interest-free
loans for passage. In Vancouver, Brian worked at a customs brokerage for seven
boring months. His break was a summer job as a musician-performer entertaining
tourists in Dawson Creek, BC.
In the fall of 1967, he and fellow Irishman Shay Duffin scored
a record deal with RCA Camden and a nine-month tour of Ontario and the
Maritimes. The “Dublin Rogues” duo combined Irish ballads, comedy patter, and
musical parodies.
Brian met Zelda Pineau on February 29, 1968, while performing
in Halifax, and he was smitten. They began a long-distance romance leading to
their marriage in Vancouver in November 1968.
Encouraged by Zelda’s praise for his letter writing, Brian
enrolled in a journalism program in Vancouver but after one semester took a reporting
job at the weekly Interior News in the northern BC town of Smithers. Nico
was born there on March 10, 1969.
After two years in small-town Smithers, the Brennans moved
to small-city Prince George. Zelda found an office job while Brian became an
announcer and city hall reporter for a private radio station, along with freelance
writing and piano playing in a lounge. The editor of the Prince George Citizen
showed up one night and offered a full-time job on the daily.
Brian covered Prince George city hall and local cultural
events for two years. In late 1973, he was rewarded with a three-month
internship in the Ottawa bureau of Southam News and the chance to write about
topics like the Canada Council. Many papers ran his humorous piece about
playing the National Arts Centre’s new pipe organ.
The Calgary Herald hired Brian in April 1974 as an
entertainment reporter and theatre critic. For a dozen years, he covered almost
every aspect of the city’s expanding arts scene. In the late 1980s, he became an
award-winning feature writer for the paper’s Sunday Magazine, before
segueing into the “Legacy” columns for which he is still fondly remembered. The
columns celebrated the recently departed with an intimacy seldom found in
obituaries.
In the late 1990s, changes in ownership and management led
to rising tension at the paper. Brian’s columns were cut to once a week, and he
was assigned to “lifestyle” stories he considered trivial. He joined a union
organizing committee that won certification in late 1998 with more than 75 per
cent support among the 160 editorial employees, and he was on the bargaining
committee during a year of fruitless negotiations leading to a strike in
November 1999.
Brian was a leader among the “Club of 93”—the number of staffers
who held out for the entire eight months of the bitter strike—but he accepted
that he would not be returning to the Herald. He was better prepared
than most for life as a freelancer. Zelda had a good job teaching for the
Catholic School Board, and Nico was well into her professional singing career.
Brian already had two book projects in the works that would establish his
reputation as an author and historian.
The Mary O’Leary biography, Máire Bhuí Ní Laoire: A Poet
of Her People (Collins, 2000), was a personal project about a distant
relative. Nico had discovered new material about O’Leary during a 1992 “roots”
sojourn in Ireland, and Brian researched her life and times on return visits to
his homeland. O’Leary (1774–1848) was a songwriter, a resonant link for the
musical Brennans.
Brian’s first Canadian book, Building a Province: 60
Alberta Lives (Fifth House, 2000), profiled men and women, famous and
obscure, who shaped the province’s evolution. Its success led to another six
thematic collections of journalistic and historical stories with titles like Scoundrels
and Scallywags: Characters from Alberta’s Past. They provided fodder for
many entertaining radio interviews.
His next biography came out in 2006, How the West Was
Written: The Life and Times of James H. Gray. Best known for his portrayals
of life on the Prairies during the Great Depression, Gray (1906–1998) was a
person Brian had met and interviewed and, in some ways, emulated. Both were
largely self-educated former newspapermen with a keen interest in social
history. Like Gray, Brian would eventually produce a dozen books, including the
biography of a prominent politician; for Gray, it had been former prime
minister R.B. Bennett.
The Good Steward: The Ernest C. Manning Story (2008),
an important work, was not a labour of love. Despite leading Alberta through
vast transitions from 1943 to 1968, the Social Credit preacher-politician
offered none of the quirks and escapades that enlivened Brian’s other tales.
However, the book was praised by academics and politicians.
Brian’s memoir, Leaving Dublin: Writing My Way from
Ireland to Canada (2011), describes experiences unique to his era and
circumstances, yet it is also a self-invention story familiar to many
immigrants. His novel, The Love of One’s Country (2020), blends
fictionalized versions of his own story and that of Mary O’Leary. More blog
posts and travel stories are on his website, www.brianbrennan.ca.
As the writer of many obituaries, Brian of course had
pre-written his own. It concluded with a tip of the hat to his many friends,
especially the “Club of 93” stalwarts from the Herald picket line:
"Good night and joy be with you all."
A memorial will be held when pandemic restrictions permit. There
will be music.
-30-
Calgary writer Robert Bott, a friend since 1974, was
assisted by Nico and Zelda Brennan, former Herald managing editor
Gillian Steward, and Charlene Dobmeier, Brian’s publisher at Fifth House.
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