The Phoenix Network:
About | Advertise
 
Letters  |  Media -- Dont Quote Me  |  News Features  |  Talking Politics  |  The Editorial Page  |  This Just In

Words as music

Alan Lupo was many things — among them, the best metro columnist Boston may ever see
By MARGARET DORIS  |  October 9, 2008

081010_lupo_main
STUFF RIGHT: In addition to his print work, Loops was a valued member of WBZ’s I-Team in the late 1970s.

Friends remember Alan Lupo.

The people's gravelly voice: Alan Lupo, 1938 - 2008. By Clif Garboden.

He originally set out to be a jazz critic. Alan Lupo, who died September 29 at a “very young” 70, loved jazz. Swing jazz in particular, and especially Artie Shaw, the child of immigrants, the poor Jewish kid from New Haven, the product of a broken home, who managed to become both a failed writer and a brilliant jazz clarinetist.  

Lupo — or as he was known in these parts, Loops — was a more than adequate musician himself. But he wasn’t much for reading music. Mostly he played by ear, from the heart. So when he first showed up at UMass-Amherst marching-band practice back in the mid 1950s, an enthusiastic Lupo fell right in step — or so he thought — with his band mates belting out The Washington Post March. As the score’s last triumphal notes faded into the ether, one lone clarinetist kept going. And going.

They all — the trombones and the tubas, the flutes and French horns — turned around and looked at him. Finally, someone clued him in: “You cut those notes in half.” Make the count twice as fast as written. Cut time.

Lupo survived, to become a devoted member of not only the marching band but the concert band. His other ambition did not fare as well. By the time he hit the Columbia School of Journalism, in 1959, Lupo had morphed from a fledgling music critic to a faithful interpreter of the lives most often overlooked.

“He could hear the music of peoples’ voices, the music of urban speech, and he could replicate it perfectly,” remembers his wife of nearly 50 years, writer and BU journalism professor Caryl Rivers. Lupo and Rivers met at Columbia and, in a profession studded with nearly as many broken marriages as empty bottles, they became one of journalism’s great love stories. A Jewish guy from working-class Winthrop and a Catholic girl from middle-class Silver Springs, Maryland — a recipe for sitcom disaster, except, “He thought I was perfect,” explains Rivers. “And I thought he was.” They raised two kids, Steve, now an FBI agent, and Alyssa, an actor, and doted on three grandchildren.

A fitting tribute
A memorial service for Alan Lupo was held, in BU’s Marsh Chapel, on October 6. It was attended by a capacity crowd of roughly 500 — a who’s who of Boston journalists; politicians past and present, including Mayor Tom Menino; and a predictably diverse selection of the fabled columnist’s academic and non-professional friends. The congregation succeeded in emotionally integrating a service comprising readings from Lupo’s columns, the Kaddish, and a “By the Light of the Silvery Moon” sing-along. It was a fitting and, you might say, well-rounded celebration of a life well lived.

BU has established a scholarship in Alan Lupo’s name. Direct queries and donations to Alan Lupo Journalism Scholarship, c/o Department of Journalism, Boston University, 640 Comm Ave, Boston, MA 02215. — Ed.
Appropriate enough for a guy who sounded like a (much) funnier second cousin to Jackie Mason, Lupo began his full-time reporting career in the Catskills. In 1963, he moved to the Baltimore Evening Sun to cover city hall. But by 1967, he was lured back home with the promise of a chance to become part of editor Tom Winship’s expansive newspaper experiment at the Boston Globe.

Winship became a big Lupo booster after the reporter took an in-depth look at Boston’s Puerto Rican community. That story, Rivers says, made Winship realize that Lupo “had a real talent, had a real interesting voice.” As part of the paper’s first urban reporting team, Lupo went on to develop major stories, such as Massport’s threatened airport-expansion encroachment into East Boston and the Inner Belt, a six lane, limited-access highway that would have gutted large parts of Cambridge and Roxbury. His stories actually held off the expansion and helped deep-six the roadway.

Street wisdom
One of the great destructive myths around today is the notion of journalistic objectivity, the celebrated detachment that perpetuates a dishonest truth. In reality, everything about journalism is subjective, starting with the daily decisions editors make to determine what stories will get space in the next issue. To pretend otherwise is, well . . . to pretend.

What shouldn’t be a myth is fairness. Alan Lupo was sure as hell not objective. But he was, above all, fair. And fairness is the handmaiden to justice.

“Coming from working-class Winthrop, he had a feel for people who didn’t have power, didn’t have money, couldn’t go up to City Hall and get a favor,” Rivers remembers. Lupo had “a real strong sense that being a reporter was about making stuff right.”

1  |  2  |   next >
Related:
  • Friends remember Alan Lupo
  • Blues and blood
    Why does US attorney Michael Sullivan keep rewarding a wayward prosecutor with big-stakes public-corruption cases? Plus, remove that tattoo, son.
  • Hardball
    How Herald  publisher Pat Purcell could pitch inside — and brush back the Globe
  • More more >
  Topics: News Features , Boston , Boston Globe , Boston Herald ,  More more >
  • Share:
  • RSS feed Rss
  • Email this article to a friend Email
  • Print this article Print
Comments

Today's Event Picks
ARTICLES BY MARGARET DORIS
Share this entry with Delicious
  •   WORDS AS MUSIC  |  October 09, 2008
    Alan Lupo was many things — among them, the best metro columnist Boston may ever see
  •   PROTESTING THE BIO-WHATEVER  |  May 18, 2007
    A week of biotech protests ends, not with a bang but with battery failure

 See all articles by: MARGARET DORIS

MOST POPULAR
RSS Feed of for the most popular articles
 Most Viewed   Most Emailed 



Featured Articles in Live Reviews:
Friday, November 21, 2008  |  Sign In  |  Register
 
thePhoenix.com:
Phoenix Media/Communications Group:
TODAY'S FEATURED ADVERTISERS
Copyright © 2008 The Phoenix Media/Communications Group