MFK Fisher by Man Ray, 1943 |
Realizing she was not cut out for an academic career, Mary
France began cooking in a small, difficult kitchen in Dijon. She cooked for
friends, simple meals which would “shake them from their routines, not only of
meat-potatoes-gravy, but of thought, of behavior.” When she and Al moved back
to the United States, they rented a place in Laguna Beach, next to Dillwyn
Parrish and his wife. No work was immediately available for Al in 1932 and they
had money troubles which were generally alleviated by Mary Frances’ family.
Among other jobs, Mary Frances began writing amusing
intellectual pieces about odd bits she found in historic texts, encouraged by
Dillwyn Parrish, who, she said “was a man destined to draw out anything
creative in other people.” In complicated circumstances, she traveled with
Parrish and her husband Al Fisher back to Switzerland, where Parrish owned a
small farm he hoped to turn into an art colony. In short order, Al left Parrish
and Mary Frances alone. They had an idyllic time together, but it was soon
stopped by the war in Europe. At the same time, Parrish had a blood clotting
problem which led to the amputation of his leg. They were married in California,
but unremitting pain and lack of hope forced Parrish to commit suicide in 1941.
Mary Frances was 33.
In the midst of this turmoil, Mary Frances’ first book, Serve
It Forth, was published in 1937 under the name MFK Fisher. After that, she
never quit writing. It became a comfort to her. She tried script writing in
Hollywood, but never liked writing in committee. Among a widening circle of
friends in publishing, she met Donald Friede and married him quite suddenly.
Donald was spending money faster than they had it, however. Mary Frances had
two daughters, Anna and Kennedy. When her father grew older, she took her
daughters back home to take care of him and work for the Whittier News,
divorcing Donald.
Upon her father’s death, the News was sold. Mary
Frances moved with her daughters to St. Helena in the wine country in
California. The next years were spent writing and taking her daughters back and
forth to Europe to further their education, although it might be said that Mary
Frances’ own restlessness provoked much of this travel. She also became a
fixture in the Napa Valley, where the wine business was becoming serious, and
gastronomes such as James Beard had settled. Mary Frances, as the oldest of her
remaining siblings, entertained constantly and always tried to get her family
together over the holidays.
In her later books, Mary Frances often wrote about places,
Whittier, Aix-en-Provence, Marseilles. She writes about her experiences of food
and drink, of the unique characters she meets and how they live, and always
about family. She wrote a couple of novels, but she did not feel she was good
at imagining things. She did what she called “reporting,” though this was not
always comfortable for those she wrote about. Sometimes surprised at how her words
hurt, she hid behind naiveté, defending herself and her work. Joan Reardon
points out in her definitive biography, Poet of the Appetites: The Lives and
Loves of MFK Fisher [2004], however, that often Mary Frances let herself be
carried by a story quite far from the truth.
MFK Fisher by John Engstad, 1942 |
Filtering culture through her unique bohemian insouciance,
Mary Frances’ sensibility fit right into that of my generation: hedonist,
indulgent, individual, always in quest of the new and interesting. Like her
friend Julia Child, she moved on from European food. Describing what they had
in common, Mary Frances wrote to Child, “We both understand the acceptance of
now.” MFK Fisher was a philosopher with a female voice, who chose the
sensuality of food and the domestic arts as her subject. There is no more
enduring legacy than vivid writing which stays close to the realistic bone.
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