54 years ago today 23 April 1967, Jayne Mansfield’s Tralee appearance was cancelled after Bishop Moynihan’s pastoral "Goddess of Lust"? letter.

54 years ago today 23 April 1967, Jayne Mansfield’s Tralee appearance was cancelled after Bishop Moynihan’s pastoral "Goddess of Lust" letter.

?54 years ago today 23 April 1967, film star Jayne Mansfield’s Mount Brandon Hotel Tralee appearance was cancelled after Bishop Moynihan’s pastoral letter was read at masses describing her as the ‘Goddess of Lust’ & instructing his parishioners not to attend her show. Seamus McConville, the editor of The Kerryman, had informed the bishop of the appearance of the busty starlet, who boasted of her vital statistics - 40-21-35. He actually played down the controversy in the subsequent issue of The Kerryman.

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Possibly the newspaperman just called the bishop for a comment. The Bishop may have actually been spurred into action by a letter from Archbishop John Charles McQuaid

This story played out against the backdrop of a complaint of the sexual and physical abuse of children in the Industrial school in Tralee. In his book, Holy Terrors, about the sexual and physical abuse that he experienced at St Joseph's Industrial School, Michael Clemenger related that shortly after his release from the school in March 1967, he went to Monsignor John Lane, the Dean of Kerry.

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Mr Clemenger actually harboured ambitions of becoming a priest. He had been told at the school he could never be ordained because his parents had not been married. "Does being a bastard bar me from becoming a priest?" he asked the Dean of Kerry. During the ensuing conversation, he told Monsignor Lane of the physical and sexual abuse by the Christian Brothers in the school. "You should forget about those things that happened and just look to the future," the Dean replied. He also essentially told him that he should forget about joining the priesthood.

On a Sunday morning, April 23, 1967, a statement was read at all masses in Killarney: "Our attention has been drawn to an entertainment in Tralee tonight. The bishop requests you do not attend." Mgr Lane, Dean of Kerry and parish priest of Tralee, duly issued a statement of his own. "A woman is brought here to give a show for which she is being paid £1,000," he stated. "This woman boasts that her New York critics said of her 'she sold sex better than any performer in the world'." Monsr John Lane went even further and instructed people to dissociate “from this attempt to besmirch the name of our town for the sake of filthy gain”. The ‘filthy gain’ presumably referred to the fact that tickets for the gig cost ten shillings and the actress was to receive £1,000 for singing six songs in a 35-minute appearance.

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Mgr Lane went on to quote from the Vatican Council, which suggested that people should reject any form of entertainment that might be considered an occasion of sin, or cause spiritual harm to themselves. "I re-echo for you the teaching of the Vatican Council," the Dean continued. "I appeal to the men and women, to the boys and girls of Tralee, to dissociate themselves from this attempt to besmirch the name of our town for the sake of filthy gain. I ask the people to ignore the presence of this woman and her associates. They are attempting something that is contrary to the moral teaching of our faith, that is against our traditions and against the ordinary decencies of life, something that is against everything we hold dear."

By the time, she arrived in Ireland, her movie career was waning but her 40-21-35 figure was undiminished and she attracted a huge crowd wherever she went. US newspapers regularly published her vital statistics, prompting evangelist Billy Graham to exclaim: “This country knows more about Jayne Mansfield’s statistics than the Second Commandment.”

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No sooner had Mansfield arrived at Shannon Airport than Bill O’Herlihy, as a young TV reporter, was dispatched to interview the star he later described as a “working man’s Marilyn Monroe”.

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Mansfield was an ardent and practising catholic and mother of 5 catholic children, a spokesman said later at a press conference.? In mid-afternoon, before Mansfield had even arrived, in Tralee, Paddy White, the manager of the Mount Brandon Hotel, issued a statement: "Owing to the controversy caused by the visit of Jayne Mansfield, the management of the Mount Brandon Hotel has decided to cancel her appearance." He later said this had been issued by mistake.

When Mansfied arrived, she was unaware that the appearance had been cancelled. Billy Clifford, one of the hotel's directors, stated before a television camera that the cancellation was because the van of her backing band had broken down outside Dublin, and the band would not be able to make the cabaret. In fact, the band - The Kerry Blues - were a local band, all of whose members were living in Tralee. They were actually in the hotel ballroom while the press conference was going on in the hotel. They were informed the show was being cancelled, but they would be paid. The first they heard of any van trouble was when they heard Clifford's statement on the news.

Mansfield flew out to Paris the following day, but the controversy rumbled on for weeks, especially after Gay Byrne highlighted the whole thing with a skit on The Late Late Show. Tralee Vocational Education Committee formally protested over the Late Late skit. Jack Healy, a local teacher, denounced the programme. "To my mind, the sketch was suggestive and immoral and should not have been presented on our national television service," Healy said. "In a matter of this nature we look to the spiritual authorities rather than to the moralists in Montrose." He asked the VEC to demand an apology from the RTE Authority.

The superior of the local CBS secondary school did not see the programme, but he said he was sure Mr Healy knew what he was talking about. Only Rev FJ McMorran, the local Presbyterian minister, dissented from the demand for an apology.

The issue was still provoking comment when Jayne Mansfield was tragically killed in a car accident in the United States on June 29, 1967.

A feature at the following festival dances at the Mount Brandon ballroom was the appearance of 'the singing priest', Fr Michael Cleary. He thereby helped to bury the Mansfield controversy. Meanwhile Michael Clemenger was outraged that the Dean of Kerry had come out so strongly about Jayne Mansfield and seemed to ignore his complaints about the sexual abuse going on in the school in Tralee. "Such was my outrage I wrote a long letter to the bishop's house in Killarney, expressing my disgust and outrage at the duplicity of both the parish priest of Tralee and the clergy in general," he noted in his book (which was re-published abroad under the title, Everybody Knew). "I also provided specific details of everything that had happened to me in St Joseph's Industrial School, the physical and sexual abuse, from 1959 to 1967. Needless to say," he added, "I never received a reply."

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Whether or not it was divine intervention, Ms Mansfield never made her cabaret debut at the Mount Brandon Hotel in Tralee County Kerry. 

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Tralee had to settle instead for the appearance of Jack & The Jackpots showband.? Interestingly Jayne Mansfield was still paid her £1,000 fee for what would have been a 35 minute appearance, so she won’t have been wholly disheartened. Gay Byrne could not resist the whole drama, broadcasting a satirical skit on The Late Late Show that angered people in Tralee more than the cancellation of the concert.

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Within two months after her return to the US Jayne Mansfield, 34 and a mother of five, was killed in a car crash in Louisiana USA.

You can see a You Tube video of Bill O'Herlihy's 1967 report at: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZiaMQuw44rc

damien roche

Professor and Head of School of Business and Humanities at Technological University Dublin

3 年

How times have changed.

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Patrick Flynn

Barrister-at-Law | Fellow of the Chartered Institute of Arbitrators (FCIArb) | Accredited Mediator

3 年

Aidan that's correct and there is a photo of it, second of two in a Kerryman piece by Simon Brouder herewith: https://m.independent.ie/regionals/kerryman/news/when-jayne-came-to-the-kingdom-35633913.html They had a flat tire on route and whilst the car was in Divane's Garage on the Killarney Road, she popped into the Church of St. Stephen and John, possibly for a photo op. Locals who remember the event, seem to say the Dominicans in Tralee came down most heavily on the visit. However, the eminent Kerry historian, T Ryle Dwyer's article (https://m.independent.ie/entertainment/movies/this-is-not-a-proper-person-we-should-have-entertaining-here-how-jayne-mansfield-inflamed-the-kerry-church-35645774.html), largely shown in the above piece and without reference, states Dean of Kerry Monsignor Lane of St. Johns, Tralee as the main force. It might be noted, Msgr Lane died soon after on the Feast Day of St Finian of Clonard and Our Lady of Guadalupe 1968. He helped bring a power station to Caherciveen which was his parish from 1949-1965. In his brief period in Tralee, he is remembered for his role in the alleviation of poverty and éamon de Valera attended his funeral.

Ah! Lord! They misspelt controversy. Also, the lovely Jane went into the Church in Castleisland, on her way to Tralee.

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